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The LIFE or John Milton . . . . tº º © e' © © © © O • tº © º INTRODUCTION . © . . te © © º © o © e . . Q © O © “e P A R A D I S E L O S T. _^— ~— BOOK I. THE First Book proposes, first in brief, the whole subject, man's disobedience, and the loss thereupon of Paradise, wherein he was placed; then touches the prime cause of his fall, the Serpent, or rather Satan in the Serpent; who, revolting from God, and drawing to his side many legions of angels, was, by the command of God, driven out of Heaven, with all his crew, into the great deep. Which action passed over, the Poem hastens into the midst of things, presenting Satan with his angels now falling into Hell, described here, not in the centre, for Heaven and Earth may be supposed as yet not made, certainly not yet accursed, but in a place of utter dark- ness, fitliest called Chaos. Here Satan, with his angels, lying on the burning lake, thunderstruck and astonished, after a certain space recovers, as from confusion, calls up to him who next in order and dignity lay by him; they confer of their miserable fall; Satan awakens all his legions, who lay till then in the same manner confounded. They rise; their numbers; array of battle; their chief leaders named, according to the idols known afterward in Canaan and the countries adjoining. To these Satan directs his speech, comforts them with hope yet of regaining Heaven, but tells them lastly of a new world, and a new kind of creature to be created, according to an ancient prophecy, or report in Heaven; for, that angels were long before this visible creation, was the opinion of many ancient fathers. To find out the truth of this prophecy, and what to determine thereon, he refers to a full council. What his associates thence attempt. Pandemonium, the palace of Satan, rises, suddenly built out of the deep : the infernal peers there sit in council . cº • * ~ BOOK II. THE consultation begun, Satan debates whether another battle be to be hazarded for the recovery of heaven. Some advise it, others dissuade: a third proposal is preferred, mentioned before by Satan, to search the truth of that prophecy or tradition in heaven concerning another world, and another kind of creature, equal or not much inferior to themselves, about this time to be created. Their doubt, who shall be sent on this difficult search ; Satan, their chief, undertakes alone the voyage, is honoured and applauded. The council thus ended, the rest betake them several ways, and to several employments, as their inclinations lead them, to entertain the time till Satan return. He passes on his journey to hell-gates; finds them shut, and who sat there to guard the m ; by whom at length they are opened, and discover to him the great gulf between hell and heaven; with what difficulty he passes through, directed by Chaos, the power of that place, to the sight of this new world which he sought ' . O tº º Q e Gº O gº tº © Q BOOK III. \ GoD, sitting on His throne, sees Satan flying towards this world, then newly created : shows him to the Son, who sat at His right hand; foretells the success of Satan in perverting mankind; clears His own justice and wisdom from all imputation, having created man free, and able enough to have withstood his tempter; yet declares His purpose of grace towards him, in regard he fell not of his own malice, as did Satan, but by him seduced. The Son of God renders praise to His Father for the manifestation of His gracious purpose towards man; but God again declares that grace cannot be extended towards man without the satisfaction of Divine justice. Man hath offended the majesty of God by aspiring to Godhead, and, therefore, with all his progeny, devoted to death, must die unless some one can be found sufficient to answer for his offence, and undergo his punishment. 62 27 V1 & CONTENTS. PAG : The Son of God freely offers himself a ransom for man: the Father accepts Him, ordains His incarnation, pronounces His exaltation above all names in heaven and earth; commands all the angels to adore Him. They obey, and by hymning to their harps in full quire, celebrate the Father and the Son. Meanwhile, Satan" alights upon the bare convex of this world's outermost orb; where wandering, he first finds a place, since called the Limbo of Vanity: what persons and things fly up thither: thence comes to the gates of heaven, described ascending by stairs, and the waters above the firmament that flow about it: his passage thence to the orb of the sun; he finds there Uriel, the regent of that orb, but first changes himself into the shape of a meaner angel; and, pretending a zealous desire to behold the new creation, and man, whom God had placed there, unquires of him the place of his habitation, and is directed: alights first on Mount Niphates . . . . 6o BOOK IV. SATAN, now in prospect of Eden, and nigh the place where he must now attempt the bold enterprise which he undertook alone against God and man, falls into many doubts with himself, and many passions, fear, envy, and despair; but at length confirms himself in evil, journeys on to Paradise, whose outward prospect and situation is described ; overleaps the bounds; sits in the shape of a cormorant on the tree of life, as the highest in the garden, to look about him. The garden described; Satan's first sight of Adam and Eve; his wonder at their excellent form and happy state, but with resolution to work their fall; overhears their discourse, thence gathers that the tree of knowledge was forbidden them to eat of, under penalty of death; and thereon intends to found his temptation, by seducing them to transgress; then leaves them awhile to know farther of their state by some other means. Meanwhile, Uriel, descending on a sunbeam, warns Gabriel, who had in charge the gate of Paradise, that some evil spirit had escaped the deep, and passed at noon by his sphere, in the shape of a good angel, down to Paradise, discovered after by his furious gestures in the mount. Gabriel promises to find him ere morning. Night coming on, Adam and Eve discourse of going to their rest: their bower described; their evening worship. Gabriel, drawing forth his bands of night-watch to walk the rounds of Paradise, appoints two strong angels to Adam's bower, lest the evil spirit should be there doing some harm to Adam or Eve sleeping; there they find him at the ear of Eve, tempting her in a dream, and bring him, though unwilling, to Gabriel; by whom questioned, he scornfully answers; prepares resistance; but, hindered by a sign from heaven, flies out of Paradise . . © tº Ö © O © Q O -º-º: O O & . 83 BOOK W. MoRNING approached, Eve relates to Adam her troublesome dream; he likes it not, yet comforts her; they come forth to their day-labours; their morning hymn at the door of their bower. God, to render man inexcusable, sends Raphael to admonish him of his obedience, of his free estate, of his enemy near at hand, who he is, and why his enemy, and whatever else may avail Adam to know. Raphael comes down to Paradise; his appear- ance described; his coming discerned by Adam afar off, sitting at the door of his bower; he goes out to meet him, brings him to his lodge, entertains him with the choicest fruits of Paradise, got together by Eve; their discourse at table; Raphael performs his message, minds Adam of his state and of his enemy; relates, at Adam's request, who that enemy is, and how he came to be so, beginning from the first revolt in heaven, and the occasion thereof; how he drew his legions after him to the parts of the north, and there incited them to rebel with him, persuading all but only Abdiel, a seraph, who in argument dissuades and opposes him, then forsakes him © © o O o o º © o tº O © © O • * - 1 15 BOOK WI. RAPHAEL continues to relate how Michael and Gabriel were sent forth to battle against Satan and his angels. The first fight described: Satan and his powers retire under night: he calls a council; invents devilish engines, which, in the second day's fight, put Michael and his angels to some disorder; but they at length pulling up mountains, overwhelm both the force and machines of Satan: yet the tumult not so ending, God, on the third day, sends Messiah his Son, for whom he had reserved the glory of that victory; He, in the power of his Father, coming to the place, and causing all his legions to stand still on either side, with his chariot and thunder driving into the midst of his enemies, pursues them, unable to resist, towards the wall of heaven; which opening, they leap down with horror and confusion into the place of punishment prepared for them in the deep : Messiah returns with triumph to his Father . Q O º e o © g • I 43 CONTENTs. vii BOOK VII. PAGM RAPHAEL, at the request of Adam, relates how and wherefore this world was first created; that God, after the expelling of Satan and his angels out of heaven, declared His pleasure to create another world, and other creatures to dwell therein; sends His Son with glory, and attendance of angels, to perform the work of crea- tion in six days: the angels celebrate with hymns the performance thereof, and His re-ascension into Heaven. 171 BOOK VIII. ADAM inquires concerning celestial motions; is doubtfully answered, and exhorted to search rather things more worthy of knowledge; Adam assents; and, still desirous to detain Raphael, relates to him what he remembered since his own creation; his placing in Paradise; his talk with God concerning solitude and fit society; his first meeting and nuptials with Eve; his discourse with the angel thereupon, who, after admonitions repeated, departs e © o O c e * e * o & • ge * e o • I91 BOOK IX. SATAN, having compassed the earth, with meditated guile returns, as a mist, by night, into Paradise; enters into the serpent sleeping. Adam and Eve in the morning go forth to their labours, which Eve proposes to divide in several places, each labouring apart; Adam consents not, alleging the danger lest that enemy of whom they were forewarned, should attempt her, found alone: Eve, loth to be thought not circumspect or firm enough. urges her going apart, the rather desirous to make trial of her strength; Adam at last yields; the serpent finds her alone: his subtle approach, first gazing, then speaking; with much flattery extolling Eve above all other. creatures. Eve, wondering to hear the serpent speak, asks how he attained to human speech, and such under- standing, not till now ; the serpent answers that, by tasting of a certain tree in the garden, he attained both to speech and reason, till then void of both. Eve requires him to bring her to that tree, and finds it to be the tree of knowledge, forbidden : the serpent, now grown bolder, with many wiles and arguments induces her at length to eat; she, pleased with the taste, deliberates awhile whether to impart thereof to Adam or not; at last brings him of the fruit: relates what persuaded her to eat thereof. Adam, at first amazed, but perceiving her lost, resolves, through vehemence of love, to perish with her; and, extenuating the trespass, eats also of the fruit: the effects thereof in them both ; they seek to cover their nakedness; then fall to variance and accusation of one another . • * * o e de o e © o e º o e • 2 I BOOK X. MAN's transgression known, the guardian angels forsake Paradise, and return up to heaven to approve their vigilance, and are approved; God declaring that the entrance of Satan could not be by them prevented. He sends His Son to judge the transgressors; who descends, and gives sentence accordingly; then, in pity, clothes them both, and re-ascends. Sin and Death, sitting till then at the gates of hell, by wondrous sympathy feeling the success of Satan in this new world, and the sin by man there committed, resolve to sit no longer confined in hell, but to follow Satan, their sire, up to the place of man. To make the way easier from hell to this world to and fro, they pave a broad highway or bridge over Chaos, according to the track that Satan first made; then, preparing for earth, they meet him, proud of his success, returning to hell; their mutual gratulation. Satan arrives at Pandemonium; in full assembly relates, with boasting, his success against man; instead of applause is entertained with a general hiss by all his audience, transformed, with himself also, suddenly into serpents, according to his doom given in Paradise; then, deluded with a show of the forbidden tree springing up before them, they, greedily reaching to take of the fruit, chew dust and bitter ashes. The proceedings of Sin and Death; God foretells the final victory of His Son over them, and the renewing of all things; but, for the present, commands His angels to make several alterations in the heavens and elements. Adam, more and more perceiving his fallen condition, heavily bewails, rejects the condolement of Eve; she persists, and at length appeases him: then, to evade the curse likely to fall on their offspring, proposes to Adam violent ways, which he approves not; but, conceiving better hope, puts her in mind of the late promise made them, that her seed should be revenged on the serpent; and exhorts her, with him, to seek"pease of the offended Deity, by repentance and supplication. O O ſº º © O O © O O © o • 247 viii. . CONTENTS. BOOK XI. - PAG THE Son of God presents to His Father the prayers of our first parents now repenting, and intercedes for them: God accepts them, but declares that they must no longer abide in Paradise; sends Michael with a band of cherubim to dispossess them, but first to reveal to Adam future things: Michael's coming down. Adam shows to Eve certain ominous signs: he discerns Michael's approach; goes out to meet him: the angel denounces their departure. Eve's lamentation. Adam pleads, but submits: the angel leads him up to a high hill; sets before him in vision what shall happen till the flood . . e Q o © . . . 281 BOOK XII. The Angel Michael continues, from the flood, to relate what shall succeed; then, in the mention of Abraham, comes by degrees to explain who that seed of the woman shall be which was promised Adam and Eve in the fall: His incarnation, death, resurrection, and ascension; the state of the Church till His second coming. Adam, greatly satisfied and re-comforted by these relations and promises, descends the hill with Michael; wakens Eve, who all this while had slept, but with gentle dreams composed to quietness of mind and sub- mission. Michael, in either hand leads them out of Paradise, the fiery sword waving behind them, and the cherubim taking their stations to guard the place . & e º O = O O © © 399 THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. adº. —- ARLY in the reign of Elizabeth, there dwelt at Holton, in Oxfordshire, or near to it, a substantial yeoman, named Milton. An ancestor of this person, it was said, had been a man of some position among the gentry in those parts, but having taken the losing side during the Wars of the Roses, had been reduced to much lower circumstances. The Milton we have mentioned, how- ever, could send his son, John Milton, to Oxford for his education. The father adhered to the creed which prevailed before the Reformation; the on, while a student at Christchurch, renounced the faith of his forefathers, and avowed himself a Protestant; whereupon his father disinherited and disowned him." But the younger Milton, though he became, in this manner, virtually fatherless, does not appear to have been disheartened. Leaving Oxford, we find him, some years later, in London, where he has so made his way through a Scrivener's—or, as we should now say, an attorney's—office, as to have become himself a scrivener. About the year 1600 he married. If we credit Philips, the grandson of the now prosperous citizen, his wife was “of the family of the Castons, derived originally from Wales;” and if so, John Milton the poet, as born of this marriage, must have had, in common with Shakespeare, a dash of Celtic blood in his veins, and might have owed something, in his higher temperament, to the fervent and imaginative genius of a people whom he describes as “an ancient and haughty race,” and with whose ancient and beautiful fictions he never ceased to be enamoured. But Antony Wood says, on the authority of Aubrey, who knew the family, that the mother of the poet was “Sarah, of the ancient family of the Bradshaws.” We incline to think, however, that Philips, though not so safe a witness generally as Aubrey, was not likely to have been in error on so familiar a point of family history, especially when committing himself to the writing of a life of Milton. Mrs. Philips, the sister of the poet, must surely have known the maiden name of her own mother. It may be that Philips and Aubrey are both right. The mother of Milton's mother may have been a Bradshaw married to a Caston; Aubrey's Lives. Philips' Life of Mêléon. . X Q THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. and if so, the relation of the Miltons to the Bradshaws would not have been . forgotten. It is difficult to imagine that either Philips or Aubrey could have expressed themselves so positively in this matter without warrant; and, in this view, we are not obliged to suppose that they really did so. Philips, always a Royalist, may not have cared to give prominence to the name of Bradshaw, and Aubrey may have had a feeling prompting him the other way. Down to the time of this marriage, the home of the Bradshaws had been almost confined to Lancashire and Cheshire, and in those counties intermarriages with the Welsh was by no means uncommon." Six children were the offspring of this marriage, three of whom died in infancy. John, the poet, was one of the remaining three, and was born in Bread Street, London, September 9th, 1608. He grew up with a sister SOIIle years older than himself, and with a brother seven years younger. The home of this family during Milton's early years was in the heart of the city— Bread Street being a street branching off from Cheapside. The house was distinguished from the rest by the sign of the Spread Eagle placed upon it— such signs being to houses in that day, especially to houses of any kind of business—what numbers are at present. Of the Bread Street of Milton's youth not a vestige remains; it was swept away by the great fire in 1666. But the new houses were built upon the old sites, so that the street is perpetuated. As we pass along, it is left to the imagination to displace all the visible erections, and to recall the lofty buildings of wood and plaster, carved and coloured in quaint fashions, and projecting, storey above storey, until small space, perhaps, is left for a strip of blue or misty sky to be seen above. Citizens, as a rule, then lived in the city. The lower parts of those somewhat heavy and gloomy but picturesque structures, were assigned to business; the upper floors were the homes of the citizen families, even in the case, for the greater part, of the most wealthy. Young Milton would know Bread Street as it was, the “Cheap” as it was. He would make his excursions through Paternoster Row, long before the booksellers had dropped, one by one, from their old quarters in St. Paul's Churchyard, into that tunnel of a thoroughfare, and were to make it memorable as the mart of publishers. St. Paul's itself, too—the old Gothic building, we mean, large enough to have enclosed the present within its walls, and with room to spare—must soon have become familiar to the future poet. He must often have trod its promenade along its great centre, where crowds of well- dressed idlers might be daily seen, whose noise and buzz, as they walked and talked, gave the place the air of an exchange more than of a place for * Masson's Life of Milton. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. - xi religious worship; serving as an outlet for news and gossip of all sorts, as newspapers did not then exist to be the carriers of such wares. Of his father, Milton says—and with a pride which is to his own honour— that “he was a man of the highest integrity.” Later he writes: “I had, from my early years, by the ceaseless diligence and care of my father—whom God recompense—been exercised to the tongues, and some sciences, as my age would suffer, by sundry masters and teachers, both at home and at the schools." And, later still, he says: “My father destined me, while yet a little child, for the study of humane letters. Both at the grammar School and at home he caused me to be instructed daily.” We know also, from other sources, that the elder Milton must have been a man of considerable culture, and that he was not only fond of music, but excelled as a composer. Lines harmonised by his skill still hold a place in our English psalmody; and one of them might be heard in his time as a lullaby on the lips of almost every nurse. Aubrey describes him as “an ingeniose man;" and his grandson, Philips, records of him, that while assiduous in business, he was not so wedded to it as to have denied himself intervals of relaxation and self-improvement. He lived to See a green old age, being eighty-four years of age when he died. Concerning the partner of the good man's pilgrimage, Milton writes, that “she was a most excellent mother, and known by her charities in the neighbourhood.” - The minister of the parish in which Bread Street was included, was a man of some mark among the Puritan clergy; and the home of the Miltons was pervaded by a piety of that graver type. We have no reason to suppose, however, that the religious training to which Milton was subject, was ever felt by him as irksome or unreasonable. The serious and religious spirit which was to become so conspicuous in him in later life, seems to have been charac- teristic of him from his earlier years. But his Puritanism through life, and in the home, we doubt not, in which he imbibed it, was not of a narrow and repulsive cast. He always wore his hair long, and, so far, might be classed with the Cavaliers rather than with the Roundheads. He grew up a reader of Shakespeare, and of all the good poetry accessible to him in his own or in other languages. He was a Puritan in so far as Puritanism meant piety and freedom, and no further. - - We have abundant evidence that Milton's capacity began to develop itself very early. We know that when not more than ten years of age. * Reasons of Church Government, book ii. * Defensio Secunda. * The tunes known as Norwich and York, Masson's Zife of Milton. The fact that Milton, when writing to his father, on plans under consideration between them, should have sent his thoughts to him in the form of an extended piece in Latin verse is evidence enough that the scrivener must have been a scholarly person. (See Ad Patrem, Poemata.) * Defensio Secunda. xii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. the family had come to look upon him as a wonderfully gifted boy, and were astonished as they read the verses even then composed by him. In that religious age, nothing could be more natural than that in the purpose of such parents, such a child should have been dedicated to the Church. Milton himself relates that such was their intention concerning him, and that his own early inclinations tended that way. It was with this view, no doubt, that he was sent to St. Paul's Grammar School, then a flourishing foundation, and not more than five minutes' walk from his home. Milton was about ten years of age when this transition from home tuition to the training of a public school took place. The spirit in which he prosecuted his studies in his schoolboy days he has himself described. Speaking of the “humane letters” to the culture of which his father had separated him, he says, “Which I seized with such eagerness, that from the twelfth year of my age I scarcely ever went from my lessons to bed before midnight; which, indeed, was the first cause of injury to my eyes, to whose natural weakness there was also added frequent headaches. All which not retarding my impetuosity in learning, he caused me to be daily instructed, both at the grammar school and under other masters at home; and then, when I had acquired various tongues, and also some not insignificant taSte for the Sweetness of philosophy, he sent me to Cambridge.” Aubrey and Philips both attest this much concerning him, and Wood adopts their state- ments. So Milton passed from boyhood to youth, and he has borne grateful testimony to the breadth and liberality of the encouragements given to his pursuits by his father as he grew in years. The following is translated from a Latin poem addressed to his father:-"When, at your expense, I had obtained access to the eloquence of the tongue of Romulus, and to the delights of Latium, and the great words becoming the mouth of Jove, uttered by the magniloquent Greeks, you them advised me to add the flowers which are the pride of Gaul, and the speech which the new Italian, attesting the barbarian inroads by his diction, pours forth from his degenerate mouth, and the mysteries which are spoken by the prophet of Palestine.” Happy the youth who had a father to whom it became him to make such acknowledgments, and who had a home to look back upon so full of grateful memories In his school experiences, also, Milton appears to have been, upon the whole, fortunate. Mr. Gill, the head-master of St. Paul's in his time, was a man competent in most respects to his vocation, and he had a son with him as an assistant during a part of Milton's schoolboy days, with whom the young poet formed a rather strong friendship. Young Gill, indeed, was * Defensio Secunda. * Ad Patrem. Masson's Milton, p. 67. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. - xiii hardly the man we should have expected Milton to have sought as a friend. He had nothing of the stately decorum of the pedagogue about him. His brusque and rash ways did not minister to his father's comfort or to his own; but he was some ten years older than Milton, was a good classic, had printed Latin and Greek verses, and made his intercourse with the youth from Bread Street so profitable to him that Milton was constrained to speak of it in after years with much gratitude. Many an attempt in verse, we can suppose, was submitted by him to the judgment of his senior friend, and assistance obtained in many a difficulty in his general studies. 6. On the 12th of February, 1625, Milton entered Christ's College, Cambridge, as a “lesser pensioner." which was a middle position between that of a “fellow commoner,” who paid the most, and that of a “sizer," who paid the least. All received the same education, but the difference in payment secured a difference in domestic privileges. The students and officials of Christ's College at that time, when all were assembled, numbered about two hundred and fifty; the students in the university were nearly three thousand. In Christ's College, the most remarkable man was Joseph Meade, fellow and tutor, well known to divines by his Clavis Apocalyptica and his studies in that direction; and now better known to the students of English history by his letters, full of the news and gossip of the hour. Many of those letters have been recently printed. Meade was wont to say freely, “I like to know how the world goes;" and fortunately for those who came within his reach, his genial nature prompted him to communicate readily the intelligence which he had been so eager to acquire. He must, in fact, have been the newspaper of his college; and if any man there was very ignorant of what was passing in Parliament, Court, or Country, the blame must have been his own. Milton, we may be sure, would not have been thus at fault. The next man of mark in Christ's College was William Chappell, also fellow and tutor, and, for a time, Milton's tutor. Chappell could dispute in Latin, after the old scholastic fashion still in vogue, with much keenness and readiness. But he was of the school of Laud in ecclesiastical affairs, and does not seem to have possessed the sort of power necessary to impress capable and independent minds." Milton's connection with Cambridge extended through seven years, from 1625, when in the seventeenth year of his age, to 1632, when in his twenty- third year. In respect to public affairs those years were memorable. James I. had breathed his last. Charles nad prosecuted his struggle with his Parliament, and had at length resolved on the perilous experiment of attempting to rule * Mitford—Masson. See many of Meade's Letters, as published by Ellis; and frequent citations from those in MS, in the third volume of Revolutions in English History. C xiv THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. England without convening any such assemblies. The war with France had been added to the war with Spain; and both, after becoming the cause of much disorder and suffering through the country, had reached a disgraceful close. The Duke of Buckingham had been cut off by the dagger of Felton, and the government came to rest in the hands of Charles and Laud. The names of the popular leaders in the Commons—the Eliots, the Cokes, and the Seldens, had been ringing in the ears of the country, and the harsh treatment to which men of that order were subjected, had called forth comments of all kinds, in all places. The stronger men among the Parliamentarians muttered their prophesy that affairs would be worse and then better. It was a matter of grateful recol- lection to such men that the Petition of Right had its place on Our statute- book, constituting as it did a signal landmark in our constitutional history. The events of this interval in Cambridge were not of a remarkable description. The election of Buckingham to the office of Chancellor, in obedience to the pleasure of the king, filled one half of the university with a sense of humiliation, and prompted the other half to acts of sycophancy which verged not a little upon the ludicrous. Then, some while after, came the installation of his Grace, with all the honours and flatteries deemed suitable to the occasion. Subsequently the king and queen favoured the university with their presence, and a hectic flush of loyalty attended the event, which deceived no one who could look beneath the surface. The course of study while Milton was at Cambridge, was still in its process of transition from the old middle-age form towards that which has since obtained. The fame of the university in its study of mathematics was wholly to come. Not until some thirty years after Milton had left was a chair. separated to that science. The elements of geometry, indeed, were not entirely overlooked, but the first rank was assigned to philology, theology, and philosophy—the latter term having respect mainly to logic and metaphysics. Lectures were delivered by university professors, which the students of the various colleges were expected, more or less, to attend. The tutorial work in each college, though systematically carried on, had not then superseded the function of the university professor, as in later times. In every college the students were separated into sections, and were placed in connection with different tutors. The comparative merits of the students was ascertained, not by the kind of examination now usual, but by the set disputations carried on in Latin in the college chapel. Such disputations, coming to the turn of each man but rarely, together with readings with the tutor, and private reading, made up the routine from which a university education was to be realised." * Masson's Life of Miltow. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. e XV We should conclude, without any direct testimony on the subject, that Milton acquitted himself creditably in his class with his tutors, that he took his full share in the chapel disputations, and that he was not negligent of private reading. We know more, however, from authentic sources, on this subject, than we should have felt at liberty to suppose, apart from such evidence. His nephew Philips says, that “for the extraordinary wit" and reading he had shown in his performances to attain his degree,” he was “loved and admired by the whole university, particularly by the fellows, and the most ingenious persons of his house.” Aubrey states that “he was a very hard student in the university, and performed all the exercises there with very great applause.” Wood is still more emphatic, stating that as during his school- days, three years before, so at college, “’twas usual with him to sit up till midnight at his book, which was the first thing that brought his eyes into the danger of blindness;" that “he profited exceedingly by his indefatigable study, and performed his collegiate and academical exercises to the admiration of all, and was accounted to be a virtuous and Sober person, yet not to be ignorant of his own parts.” In 1642, one of his assailants described him as having spent a riotous youth at the university, and as having been at length “vomited thence." To which Milton replies, “For which commodious lie, that he may be encouraged in the trade another time, I thank him; for it has given me an apt occasion to acknowledge publicly, with all grateful mind, that more than ordinary respect which I found, above any of my equals, at the hands of those courteous and learned men, the fellows of that college wherein I spent some years, who, at my parting, after I had taken two degrees, as the manner is, signified, in many ways, how much better it would content them that I should stay, as by many letters, full of kindness and loving respects, both before that time and long after, I was assured of their singular good affection towards me.” It should be borne in mind that these statements were published within ten years after his leaving Cambridge, when the men who might have refuted them, had they been untrue, were most of them living. The time was to come in which Milton was to side publicly with the Parliament, and to plead for great changes in Church and State, not sparing the universities. When that time came, nothing would be more natural than that his opponents should go back to his university life; and if that season, so rarely faultless in the case of any man, could be made to yield any bit of scandal, not only would the most be made of it, but much would be grafted upon it. Now it did so happen that in Milton's second year a quarrel took place between him and his tutor, Chappell, and Dr. Bainbridge, the master, was * This word was used at the time in the sense of capacity or genius. * Apology for Smectymnuus. xvi THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. | obliged to interfere. The result, it seems, was, that Milton was required to absent himself for a season, or that he chose to do so. But the absence was not long. It occurred in the Lent term of 1626, and it did not occasion the loss of a term. When Milton returned, another person, named Tovey, became his tutor. • But on these facts something more has been grounded. Dr. Johnson, with the temper characteristic of his whole criticism on Milton, says, “There is reason to believe that Milton was regarded in his college with no great fond- ness. That he obtained no fellowship is certain; but the unkindness with which he was treated was not merely negative. I am ashamed to relate what I fear is true, that Milton was one of the last students in either university that suffered the public indignity of corporal punishment.” Now, we have seen that nothing could be more untrue than the first part of this assumption—viz., that Milton experienced a general unfriendliness from the men of his college; and the other insinuation, which points to a special indignity inflicted upon him, is, in our judgment, equally without foundation. The only apparent evidence in support of this imputation is in one of Aubrey's manuscripts. Writing on the authority of Christopher Milton, Aubrey says that Milton received “some unkindness” from the hands of Chappell; and over the word “unkindness,” the words “whipt him,” are subsequently interlined. Whence this later account comes no one knows. Beyond a doubt, punishment in that degrading form was still administered both in Cambridge and in Oxford, but much less frequently than in former times, and rarely ever in the case of youths not under sixteen. But in the spring of 1626 Milton was in his eighteenth year Looking at the case altogether, we are satisfied that we have here one of the many inventions which were flung at a writer who had dared to assail, and with a bold hand, the prejudices and the selfish passions of the generation about him." We have abundant evidence that the early life of Milton, while free from any affectation of purity or goodness, as from affectations of all kinds, was a life of seriousness, and of chastity in a high sense of that word. But his 1 “Dr. Johnson, who was meanly anxious to revive this slander against Milton, as well as some others, had supposed Milton himself to have this flagellation in his mind, and indirectly to confess it, in one of his Latin poems, where, speaking of Cambridge, and declaring that he had no longer any pleasure in the thought of re-visiting that university, he says– “Nec duri libet usque minus preferre magistris, Caeterague ingenio non subuenda meo.’ This last line the malicious critic would translate “And other things insufferable to a man of my temper.' But ingenium is properly expressive of the intellectual constitution, whilst it is the moral constitution that suffers degradation from personal chastisement—the sense of honour, of personal dignity, of justice, &c. Indoles is the proper term for this latter idea, and in using the word ingenium there cannot be a doubt that Milton alluded to the dry scholastic disputations, which were shocking and odious to his fine poetical genius. If, therefore, the vile story is still to be kept up in order to dishonour a great man, at any rate let it not in future be pretended that any countenance to such a slander can be drawn from the confessions of the poet himself.” De Quincey, Works, xv. 317, 318; Masson's Life of Milton. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xvii seriousness was a manly seriousness; it had no tincture of gloom, nothing of narrowness. His chastity, too, was not only a fact, but a fact sustained, in his case, by views which even pure men might regard as too ideal and mystical to be adapted to a world like ours. In his estimation, failure in that virtue was more culpable in man than in woman, as betraying weakness in the nature that should be the stronger and the nobler. His lines on Hobson the carrier show that he was not without his seasons of playful humour; and his letter to his friend Diodati, in the spring of 1626, shows that while in London he sometimes went to see what was doing in the theatres. At a later time, indeed, being accused by some of his clerical opponents of writing like a person who had been too familiar with the play-house, he deemed it well to bid his censors look at home, in the following terms: “But since there is such necessity in the hearsay of a tira, a periwig, or a vizard, that plays must have been seen, what difficulty was there in that, when, in the college, so many of the young divines, and those of next aptitude to divinity, have been seen so often upon the stage, writhing and unboning their clerical limbs to all the antic and dishonest gestures of Trinculoes, buffoons, and bawds, prostituting the shame of that ministry, which either they had, or were nigh having, to the eyes of the courtiers and court ladies, with their grooms and mademoiselles? There, while they acted and over-acted, among other young scholars, I was a spectator: they thought themselves gallant men, and I thought them fools; they made sport, and I laughed ; they mispronounced, and I misliked; and to make up the Atticism, they were out, and I hissed.” The reference here seems to be, to the great performance before the king and queen in Cambridge in 1629. The description indicates the kind of taste which Milton would have exacted from the drama; and it gives us a glimpse of the young Milton of Christ's, as he joins, “with other young scholars,” in showing his contempt of the blundering performance, until, at last, he hisses them outright. In fact, though Milton declined the priestly function in the English Church, he was not, in his own conception, the less a priest on that account. The priesthood to which he aspired was the bardic priesthood. The inspiration he * sought was that which had come upon the old prophets—an inspiration which might come upon them as laymen, but which raised them to a level with the most sacred themes. In his apprehension, a poet of the order which he hoped to become, should be, must be, a consecrated man. The singer of Bacchanalian Songs may be himself Bacchanalian ; but a poet who would ascend to things celestial must not be of the earth, earthy. The evil inseparable from our nature may qualify him to depict evil; but if he is to make men feel how * Apology for Smectymnuus. xviii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. awful goodness is, he must have striven hard towards those higher regions of being where goodness rules. In all art, the truly religious element must come from religious men. Genius without sanctity may touch the ark, but it will be but to profane it. However much at home in other regions, if the special faculty for this region be wanting, success will be wanting. In art, as in religion, the natural man does not discern spiritual things. The current doctrine is, that men of poetical and artistic power will always be very much the creatures of imagination and sensibility, and, in Consequence, will be subject to alternations of elevation or depression, in the most capricious forms—even their morals and religion being subject to these laws in their nature, or, rather, to this absence of law. The life of Milton is not the only life of its class which belies this foolish and mischievous doctrine. He not - only felt its fallacy, but that feeling became a profound conviction, governing his whole life. By reflection on this matter, he writes, “I was confirmed in this opinion, that he who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well hereafter in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem—that is, a com- position and pattern of the best and honourablest things; not presuming to sing high praises of heroic men or famous cities, unless he have in himself the experience and the practice of all that is praiseworthy.” What marvel if a young mind in Cambridge, with thoughts of this nature struggling to get form and fixedness, should have been, to a great extent, a mind dwelling apart 2 What marvel if such a youth is found to lament the all but total absence of persons with conceptions or sympathies at all of this order among those who were about him 22 That the collapse and reserve following from such a sense of isolation should have been construed as the evidence of a haughty temper, and of undue self-esteem, was no more than might have been expected. In some connections, to make men enemies, you have only to allow them to suspect that you deem them inferiors. It is clear that from these causes Milton suffered during the early days of his college course. Something of haughtiness there probably was in his manner, but much that had that appearance came from another source. His self-esteem, too, was considerable; but it was calm, intelligent, and such as his intelligence would not have allowed him to throw off, even if he had endeavoured to do so. His superiority was a fact, and it would have been affectation in him to have seemed to be unconscious of it. Every one has heard that from his fair * Apology for Smectymnuus. * It is thus he writes after about two years' residence in college: “Truly, among us here, as far as I know, there are hardly one or two, here and there, who do not fly off unfeathered in theology, while all but rude and uneducated in philology, as well as in philosophy, content too lightly to pick up as much theology as may suffice for anyhow sticking together a little sermon, and stitching it over with worn rags from other quarters.” Letter to Alexander Gill, July 2, 1628; Masson's Life of Milton, 164-5. This discontent with the men, and a discontent, no less marked, with the routine of the place, was not a mood likely to make many friends; yet who can wonder at the feeling? THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xix complexion, and the beauty of his features, he sometimes went by the name of “the lady of Christ’s.” But it was well known that he was a good swords- man; and Wood says, “His deportment was affable, his gait erect and manly, bespeaking courage and undauntedness.” Milton must have commenced the study of Hebrew when very young. The earliest poetry that has reached us from his pen consists of his paraphrases on the 114th and 136th Psalms. Those attempts, he tells us, were made in his fifteenth year. There is a stately and vigorous tone in them, of the kind which was to be characteristic of his later writings. His next poetical com- position known to us dates nearly a year after his connection with Cambridge. It is a poem entitled, “On the Death of a Fair Infant.” The infant was the child of his sister Philips. The verses exhibit a rich play of fancy, and are full of conceptions and expressions which only a true poet would have been able to command. The “Vacation Exercise,” which stands next in order, was written some twelve months later, and is chiefly interesting as showing how the young poet could manipulate the dry logic of the schools, when disposed to exercise his skill on such subjects. The hymn which followed, “On the Morning of Christ's Nativity,” is of another order. It is a glorious utterance, worthy of its subject. In the judgment of Mr. Hallam, it may, perhaps, be said to be the most beautiful hymn in our language. It was produced for the Christmas of 1629. Immediately afterwards the pieces on the “Circum- cision” and the “Passion” were written; but at the eighth verse of the piece last named, the poet stayed his hand, and at a later time subjoined the following statement of his reason for so doing : “This subject the author finding to be above the years he then had when he wrote it, and nothing satisfied with what was begun, left unfinished." Critics have regarded this judgment as a sound one. His sixteen lines “On Shakespeare” are supposed to have been written on a blank leaf of a copy of the works of the great dramatist, probably on a copy of the first folio edition. In 1632 we find them, with other verses of the same kind, prefixed to the second edition of that collection, but they are printed anonymously. The fact, however, of their appearing there is interesting, from their being the first lines of Milton that, so far as we know, had then found their way into print at all. The piece, from about the same time, on listening to “Solemn Music,” is quite Miltonic in its cast:- That undisturbed song of pure content, Aye sung before the saphire-coloured throne, To Him who sits thereon, With saintly shout and solemn jubilee: Where the bright seraphims in burning row, And the cherub host in thousand quires, Touch their immortal harps of golden wires, With those just saints that wear victorious palms, •) Hymns devout and holy psalms, Sing everlastingly. XX THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. The Marchioness of Winchester was a lady of great beauty, beloved for her benevolence, and reverenced for her extraordinary endowments. An inflammation, which passed from her face to her throat, carried her off almost suddenly, and while in a state of pregnancy. Her death was widely and deeply deplored, and called forth poetical tributes to her memory from Ben Jonson, Davenant, and some other well-known names. Milton also brought his lament, under the title of “An Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester.” Of this production it will be enough to say, that the young poet of Christ's did not suffer from being brought into comparison on this occasion with the veterans in his art. We only need direct the attention of the reader to the sonnet on his reaching “The age of twenty-three,” to his lines on “ Time.” and to those on Hobson, the “University Carrier,” to complete our account Of the known English poetry of Milton during his seven years of residence at Cambridge. But Milton's poetry in Latin during his student years was not incon- siderable. No fragment of it, however, passed into print during that period; and it has been generally accepted as evidence of his scholarship, rather than as presenting a fitting vehicle for the action of his genius aS a poet. If Milton was dissatisfied with the aids to culture which he found in Cambridge, it should be remembered that Gibbon was much more dissatisfied with Oxford on that ground a century later, and a man like the poet Words- worth may be found expressing himself somewhat after the same manner even in our time. But the truth is, in the best colleges and in the best times, the man who gets no more education than tutorial oversight and help may secure to him will get very little. Milton, no doubt, owed something to his tutor Tovey; but more, immensely more, to that wider tutoring of society and of books which gave its influence to the voluntary action of his nature. The things which grow in the soul are things more or less native to it. To educate the mind is to draw out its power, and the power must be there, or it cannot be educed. All gifted minds have been conscious of this fact. It was thus eminently with the man who was to become the author of “Paradise Lost.” * Milton did not seem to be in haste to decide on his walk in life. His course was so apparently aimless, down even to the last year of his time in Cambridge, that a friend, to whose judgment he owed some deference, appears to have expostulated with him on that ground. In a carefully-written letter he attempts to vindicate himself. He denies being governed by a mere love of learning. Were he influenced by no stronger motive, there were considerations, such as the desire of “home and family,” or of “honour and repute,” that would soon overpower that motive. But the love of learning THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. gº xxi being good in itself, may beget such a reverence of what should be done with it as to dispose a man to hazard the charge of being late in the field, rather than incur the reproach of appearing there not duly equipt. He then transcribes for his friend the sonnet he had written, when arrived at the age of twenty- three, as evidence that he had not been without thought on this subject. The friend so addressed evidently hoped to see him a parish priest. Milton does not express, on this occasion, any conscientious objection to becoming a clergy- man—as a Cambridge student, and as Cambridge was then governed, it was not likely that he would do so. We have good reason to think that he felt scruples on that point even then. But he had enough to urge in self-defence, without touching upon matters which Laud and his instruments were doing their best to punish as crimes. Ten years later he had cast aside all such reticence. He then says, as we have seen, that by his parents and friends he was destined, “of a child,” to the church, and that his own inclination tended that way, “till coming to some maturity of years, and perceiving what tyranny had invaded the church,” he saw clearly “that he who would take orders must subscribe slave, and take an oath withal, which, unless he took with a con- science that would retch, he must straight perjure himself, or split his faith.” He thought it good, therefore, “to prefer a blameless silence, before the sacred office of speaking, bought and began with servitude and forswearing.” He speaks of himself, accordingly, as a man “Church-ousted by the prelates,” and as possessing a right, in return, to criticise both the church and her rulers." Milton, we have reason to think, had his moments in which he thought of giving himself to the law. But his writings, in prose and verse, before leaving Cambridge, gave his friends the impression that he had a vocation to write poetry that would live; and such was, no doubt, the dream of his own spirit, when in his higher moods. To this idea he endeavoured, by degrees, to reconcile the more conventional sagacity of his worthy father. He reminded him of his own passion for music—what marvel if the son of such a father should have a passion for poetry? It was painful for him to disappoint the hopes of one so well entitled to his reverence and affection; but in his estimation, the silver mines of Peru were of small value compared with the power to produce immortal verse. His father, in his generous wisdom, had aided him in realising capacity and passion in that form, and must bear with him in obeying this current of his nature.” In this mood Milton left Cambridge. e - By that time the scrivener had relinquished business, and had settled in the village of Horton, in Buckinghamshire, with the intention, apparently, of * 7he A’eason of Self-Government. * Ad Patrew. xxii - THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. passing the evening of his days in that retreat. How it went with the son during the next five years of his life, he has himself stated in few words. “At my father's country residence,” he says, “whither he had retired to pass his old age, I, with every advantage of leisure, spent a complete holiday in turning over the Greek and Latin writers; not but that sometimes I exchanged the country for the town, either for the purpose of buying books or for that of learning something new in mathematics or in music, in which sciences I then delighted.” During those five years Milton wrote his sonnet on the Nightingale, the Allegro and Penseroso, the Arcades, and Comus, and Zycidas. The Nightingale is founded on the bit of rural credulity which supposed that to hear the note of that bird in spring before the cuckoo was a sign of success in love. Concerning the Allegro and Penseroso, we only need repeat that they have their place in the first rank of our idyllic poetry. The Arcades is an incomplete production; the omitted portion was probably in prose. Harefield, the seat of that distinguished lady, the Countess Dowager of Derby, where this dramatic poem was presented, was only a few miles distant from Horton. But we have no reason to suppose that Milton was known to the family. It is probable that the lines were written at the request of his musical friend, Henry Lawes. ' To a request from that quarter we no doubt owe the origin of Comus, of which we shall speak elsewhere. - It was during his residence at Horton that Milton was incorporated as a member of the University of Oxford. In those days, the standing of a scholar in one university might thus give him a place in the other. Oxford was much more accessible from Horton than Cambridge. - It was at Horton, too, and in this interval, that Milton lost “his most excellent mother.” She lies buried in the chancel of the parish church. By the side of that grave Milton must have stood, and have shed his tear with his mourning father, his sister, and his brother, as they listened to the earth falling on that coffin, and looked their last look into that narrow house to which all come in their allotted time. It was also towards the close of these five years at Horton, that Edward King, of Christ's College, the friend of Milton, perished in the St. George's Channel, an event which called forth from the poet the monody under the name of Zycidas. The gifted man whose life was thus closed in the twenty- fifth year of his age, was looking towards the ministry of the church; and Milton glances at this fact so as to indicate, as clearly as was then safe, his own malcontent feeling in relation to the ecclesiastical establishment, and his expectation of a coming retribution in that quarter. When this monody was Defensio Secunda. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xxiii reprinted, in 1645, he author could dare to proclaim his whole meaning, and he accordingly placed the following sentence at the head of the poem: “In this monody, the author bewails a learned friend, unfortunately drowned in his passage from Chester, in the Irish seas, 1637; and by occasion foretels the ruin of our corrupted clergy, them in their height.” But an interval was still to pass before this prophecy would be realised. We have two letters written by Milton about this time, to his friend Diodati, which give us some insight into his habits and inner life. He assures his friend that he is a slow man in letter-writing. Another cause of his seeming negligence as a correspondent consisted in his inability to mingle work and play. In his case, generally, to be committed to a thing was to be committed to it without interruption until done, or until he should come to some natural resting-place. In some respects, he will not venture to say what God may or may not have conferred upon him; but one gift, at least, has been instilled into him—viz., a fervent love of the beautiful, and a passion to seek it wherever it may be found. To a commerce with such things he must aspire; and if he should not do so with a success commensurate with his hopes, his next effort should be to do fitting homage to those who have been more fortunate. He confesses that in this spirit he is pluming his wings, moving slowly, but, as he hopes, wisely. It must not be supposed, however, that he has no thought of the practical. Far from it. He has some notion of taking chambers in one of the Inns of Court; and thinks it would be pleasant to see his friends there, and to saunter with them, on summer evenings, in the neighbouring walks. We have no reason to suppose that this last thought was ever acted upon. Another idea took much stronger possession of his mind about this time. His studies had filled his imagination with visions of the past, associated with the Alps, the land of the Apennines, and the regions beyond. How natural that he should wish to traverse those countries, to tread the old pathways in their ancient cities, and to gaze on the monumental wonders still to be seen there. The failing health of his mother may have constrained him to check this desire hitherto; and the fact that since her decease his brother Christopher had married, and had come to reside with his father, may have seemed to say that the fitting time had now come. The cost of his project would be con- siderable, as it was his intention to travel as a gentleman, with his own servant. His affectionate father, we may suppose, felt less hesitation on that ground than on some others. But his consent was given, and in May, 1638, Milton crossed the channel, on his way to Paris. He had been careful to obtain good * Masson's Milton, pp. 597-601. xxiv - THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. introductions. One of these came from his distinguished neighbour, Sir Henry Wotton, Provost of Eton. The provost had lately become possessed of a copy of Comus, as printed by Henry Lawes, which had delighted him greatly. He had also conversed on some occasion with the author, and assures him that the pleasure of that interview was such as to have led him to hope for a renewal of the “draught,” by inviting him to “a poor meal or two,” when they “might have banded together some good authors.” The following is the postscript to an epistle from the courteous old provost:-" Sir-I have expressly sent this - my footboy to prevent your departure without some acknowledgment from me of the receipt of your obliging letter, having myself, through some business, I know not how, neglected the ordinary conveyance. In any part where I shall understand you fixed, I shall be glad and diligent to entertain you with home novelties; ever for some fomentation of our friendship, too soon inter. rupted in the cradle.” - On his arrival at Paris, one of Milton's introductions secured him the friendly notice of Lord Scudamore, the English ambassador; and through his lordship's personal courtesy the young Englishman was introduced to the learned Hugo Grotius, then ambassador from the Queen of Sweden to the French Court. We know nothing of what passed at this interview, except that Grotius is said to have taken “the visit kindly,” and to have given his visitor “entertainment suitable to his worth, and the high commendations he had heard of him.” But Grotius was much occupied at that time with a dream about strengthening Protestantism by uniting the Episcopalian Churches of that faith— in England, Sweden, Denmark, Norway—and passing by all other Protestants. If this sorry project was broached to Milton, his response, we may be sure, would not be of a very agreeable description. - Milton's stay in Paris was for a few days only. From Paris he journeyed to Nice; thence he sailed to Genoa, and thence to Leghorn. From Leghorn his route was through Pisa to Florence. In the latter city he remained two months. Florenče was then, as it has been for centuries, the great seat of Italian culture. Almost every street had its academy or club, consisting of the voluntary associations of scholars, poets, artists, and men of science. By the help of introductions obtained in England or Paris, Milton was readily admitted into some of the most distinguished of these fraternities. To the enjoyment of this privilege it was necessary that some composition from his pen should be produced, and this condition was complied with by presenting some of the things written by him while at Cambridge, or others written for the purpose. Being able to speak both Latin and Italian with correctness and fluency, he * Reliquae Wottoniana. Printed also by Milton, in his edition of Comus. in 1645. * Philips. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. XXV was at once on a level with his new friends; and great, it would seem, was the pleasure he found in such meetings. When nobly pleading, at a later time, for the liberty of the press, he says: “I would recount what I have seen and heard in other countries where this kind of inquisition tyrannises; where I have sat among their learned men—for this honour I had—and been counted happy to be born in such a place of philosophic freedom as they supposed England was, while themselves did nothing but bemoan the servile condition into which learning amongst them was brought; that this was it which had damped the glory of Italian wits; that nothing had been there written, now these many years, but flattery and fustian." In the company of persons of this order, Milton was admitted to the presence and discourse of the great philosopher of the age. “There,” he says, “it was that I found and visited the famous Galileo, grown old, a prisoner to the Inquisition, for thinking in astronomy otherwise than the Franciscan and Dominican licensers thought." Milton and Galileo face to face! And Galileo in the state to which the younger man now gazing upon him will come—in darkness, blind | But, for the present, Milton enjoys the light—the light of the Italian sky, and, when day has fled, the light which gives so much brilliancy to those learned gatherings, and to the higher circles of Florence. For it is evident that to the latter Milton had admission, and that his heart, guarded as it might be, was not wholly proof against impression from the beauty to be seen in those circles. Pieces written by him in Florence will be found among his poems, and verses composed there in his praise have come down to us—verses which, if they do not show great genius in the writers, show clearly enough how unusual must have been the admira- tion awakened by the genius of Milton. From Florence Milton took his course towards Rome, by way of Sienna. In Rome he soon made the acquaintance of Lucas Holstenius, the keeper of thé Vatican library, and with little or no introduction. Holstenius had studied three years in Oxford—a fact which may in part explain the special courtesy which Milton remembered so gratefully. But his courtesy rose into admiration as he began to discover the stores of learning possessed by the stranger, and as he felt the potency with which he could use his knowledge. So moved was he that he must needs sound the praises of his new acquaintance in the hearing of Cardinal F. Barbarini, the Pope's relative and his prime minister. A few days later, the cardinal gives a grand concert, and among the persons invited is the traveller who had so fascinated Holstenius. On which occasion, says Milton, the cardinal, waiting at the door, “sought me out in so great a crowd, nay, almost laying hold of me by the hand, admitted me within, in a manner the most truly honourable.” All this, he tells his friend Holstenius, must have come from his good offices. It was at the cardinal's, probably, that xxvi - THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Milton heard Leonora sing—a young and beautiful woman, whose voice and Science had made her queen in her department. Milton has apprised us of the entranced feeling with which he listened to her notes, by writing no less than three epigrams in praise of her skill. Two Romans, Joannes Salsilus and Salvaggi—names forgotten in our time, but of some note then—wrote lines on Milton, full of extravagant eulogy; and the former was so far esteemed by the poet that on hearing subsequently of his illness, Milton addressed lines of condolence to him in Latin verse. When about two months had been occupied in exploring the remains of ancient Rome, and in this sort of intercourse with its modern inhabitants, Milton set his face towards Naples. On his way thither, a hermit was allowed to share his vehicle with him. The recluse proved to be a man of some literary culture, and being charmed by the traveller, very much as Holstenius had been before him, on arriving at Naples, he must see that a person of so much worth does not leave the place without being introduced to Manso, Marquis of Villa, a person of high place in those parts, and the patron of genius everywhere. Every one acquainted with the sad history of Torquato Tasso must be familiar with the name of John Baptist Manso, his steady and generous friend. Manso was now nearly eighty years of age. He received Milton courteously, and the effect of the interview we may learn from the fact that he became in person the guide of the young scholar to all places of interest in Naples and its neighbourhood. “I experienced from him,” says Milton, “as long as I remained there, the most friendly attentions. He accompanied me to the various parts of the city, and took me over the viceroy's palace, and came more than once to my lodgings to visit me. At my departure he made earnest excuses to me for not having been able to show me the further attention which he desired in that city on account of my unwillingness to conceal my religious sentiments.” Milton's resolve, on leaving home, was, never to obtrude his religious views, but never to conceal them when that question should be raised by others. But this precaution, it seems, was not enough to secure him against inconvenience, nor even from danger; for when he meditated returning to Rome, he was admonished by merchants in Naples that they had learnt by letters, that snares were being laid for him by English Jesuits, if he should appear again in that city. But return he must, and he would return through Rome. He was a good swordsman, and feared nothing, where the strife should be man to man. It was at Naples that grave tidings reached him in regard to the conflict which had grown up between sovereign and subject in England. It was his wish to have gone to Sicily, and onwards to Greece; but on receiving such news, he - says: “I considered it disgraceful that, while my fellow-countrymen were fighting THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xxvii at home for liberty, I should be travelling abroad at ease, for intellectual purposes.” The Scottish nation had swept away, and with a rude hand, all the ecclesiastical innovations of Laud and the king. England was in strong sympathy with what Scotland had done; and if civil war had not commenced south of the Tweed, thoughtful men saw that it was imminent. When about to leave Naples, Milton addressed an epistle to Manso, in Latin hexameters, rich in a higher style of poetry than anything which the muse of Tasso had inspired in his favour. Manso, in return, presented his friend with two cups, of rich workmanship, and with them the following brief but expressive lines. The reference in the last line is to the well-known story of the beautiful Saxon youths exposed for sale in the Roman slave-market in the time of Pope Gregory I- - - “JOANNES BAptistA MANSUs, MARQUIS OF VILLA, NEAPOLITAN, to John Milton, ENGLISHMAN. “Mind, form, grace, face, and morals are perfect; if but thy creed were, Then not Anglic alone, truly Angelic thou’dst be.”" g It was something to leave this impression on the mind of the first man in Naples. “To Rome,” says Milton, “I returned, notwithstanding what I had been told. What I was, if any man asked, I concealed from no one; if any one in the city of the Pope attacked the orthodox religion, I, as before, for a second space of nearly two months, defended it most freely.” In Florence, as in Rome, Milton renewed his intercourse with old friends, and then passed through Bologna and Ferrara, to halt for a month in Venice. From Venice his track was through Verona and Milan, and over Mount St. Bernard to Geneva. In the latter city the traveller remained some weeks; and then, returning by the same route to Paris, he reached England about the end of July, having been absent “a year and three months, more or less.” This brief account of his travels was given when the course he had taken in public affairs had exposed him to many unscrupulous party calumnies; and for this reason he concludes his statement on this matter in the following words: “I again take God to witness that in all those places, where so many things are considered lawful, I lived sound and untouched from all profligacy and vice, having this thought perpetually with me, that, though I might escape the eyes of men, I certainly could not the eyes of God." - It is observable that all the poetry of Milton written while in Italy, in common with nearly everything written by him while in Cambridge, is of a grave description. We have seen, that in his noble epistle to Manso, he made no secret of intending to give his mind to the writing of an epic poem; and the verses of his friends concerning him, both in Rome and Florence, show * Masson’s Milton. * Defensio Secundus. xxviii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. that enough had fallen from his lips in those places to have led them to expect a work of that nature from his genius. To this time, indeed, no thought had come to him of taking the loss of Paradise as his theme. It was the story of King Arthur, and of the chivalrous knights and the ladies about him, that had hitherto filled his imagination with its glowing pictures. * When Milton returned to England, his father had relinquished the house at Horton, and was residing with his son Christopher at Reading. The expense inseparable from the travel of the poet had not prevented his purchasing a considerable number of books. Some he brought with him, and others were to follow. In fact, we are warranted from circumstances in supposing that the means now allowed him were such as to secure him a moderate independence. Commercial life, in his case, was not thought of, and he had come to be as little disposed towards professional life. If his kind father could provide for him, so as to leave him to his books and to his • literary work, we may be sure he would, and it is obvious that he must have so done. & Milton's first step on his return to London, was to hire part of a house in St. Bride's Churchyard. There he lodged his books, and resumed his studies. This was sometime towards the close of 1639. But in the following year we find him taking a “garden house"—that is, a detached house with a garden round it—in Aldersgate Street: a street described as being at that time, one of the most quiet and genteel outlets of London. By this time his sister Philips had become a widow, and had married again. While in St. Bride's Churchyard he had taken her youngest son—a lad of much promise, then nine years of age—“to his own charge and care,” and now an elder nephew was received with him as a boarder. Having generously engaged to conduct the education of these lads himself, we find a few others taken with them, sons of his personal friends, and with whom he no doubt received a liberal acknowledgment for his services. At this point in Milton's career, Johnson gives full vent to his bitter disaffection towards him. “Let not our veneration for Milton,” he writes, “forbid us to look with some degree of merriment on great promises and small performances; on the man who hastens home because his countrymen are contending for their liberty, and, when he reaches the scene of action, vapours away his patriotism in a private boarding-school." Milton tells us that he thought it became him at this juncture to leave, “the event of public affairs, first to God, and then to those to whom the people had committed that task.” But Milton's writings are, to a large extent, his biography; and had * Defensio Secundas. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. XXix .*.*, Jonnson condescended to read his prose works with the care they merit, the following passage must have arrested his attention, and must have sufficed somewhat to check his merriment: " Relying on the assistance of God, they— the people of England—repelled servitude with the most justifiable war; and though I claim no share of their peculiar praise, I can easily defend myself against the charge (if any charge of that nature should be brought against me) of timidity or of indolence. For I did not for any other reason decline the toils and dangers of war, than that I might, in another way, with much more afficacy, and with not less danger to myself, render assistance to my countrymen, and discover a mind neither shrinking from adverse fortune, nor actuated by any improper fear of calumny or of death. Since from my childhood I had been devoted to the more liberal studies, and was always more powerful in my intellect than in my body, avoiding the labours of the camp, in which any robust common soldier might easily have surpassed me, I betook myself to those weapons which I could wield with the most effect, and I conceived that I was acting wisely when I thus brought my better and most valuable faculties— those which constituted my principal strength and consequence—to the assistance of my country and her most honourable cause.” No course that Milton might have taken could have exposed him to greater calumny than he braved; and as to its danger, that his head did not fall on the scaffold, as the price of his temerity, was to become a matter of wonder to himself and to all men. Milton lodged himself and his books in St. Bride's Churchyard in the autumn of 1639. He removed from St. Bride's to Aldersgate Street in 1640, and he sent out his first blast on the side of the Parliament and of ecclesiastical reform in 1641. During eleven years Charles I. had been endeavouring to govern England without the aid of a Parliament. His Majesty had deliberately suspended the laws which he had bound himself by oath at his coronation, and by Solemn pledges since, to uphold. The end of Government is to give security to person and property, but that security had passed away. The king taxed the subject as he pleased; sold monopolies in all branches of trade as he pleased; and arrested, fined, and imprisoned real or supposed malcontents as he pleased. No one could be safe, except under the conditions of being submissive and silent; and no man knew his own even on those terms. In ecclesiastical affairs, the Romanising system sustained by Laud was ascendant, and the great aim of its adherents was to suppress all Nonconformity, and all free thought; to perpetuate a hierarchy charged high with priestly elements; to impose the English Prayer Book, not only on the English, but also on the Scots, and to assimilate the Anglican ritual to the Roman to such an extent, that scarcely any difference * Defensio Secunda. XXX º THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. could be seen between them. This was the policy in relation to the Church which Laud regarded as best in itself, and as most in accordance with the new policy of the sovereign. - But in 1639 Scotland rebelled, and as a nation, denounced and cast off this whole order of things. The king appealed to his English subjects to aid him in Suppressing this revolt. The answer given was—to obtain our assistance, you must give us back our laws, and allow us the freedom which those laws were designed to secure to us for the correction of abuses, and the development of our interests as a nation. In 1641 Charles had resorted to every available expedient, in the hope of avoiding compliance with these terms — but in vain. He had called an assembly of peers at York. He had dissolved the Short Parliament summoned in the spring of 1640; and he had been obliged to consent to the meeting of the memorable Long Parliament, in the November of that year. But, though the sword had been drawn against the rule of the king in Scotland, hitherto no weapon had been unsheathed against him in England. Had Milton been never so much disposed, therefore, to fly to arms in this controversy, the only way in which he could have done so within the first three years after his return from Italy, would have been by migrating to Scotland, and joining the ranks of the insurgents in that kingdom. In England, during those years, the points at issue were calmly submitted to discussion, and both parties protested against the thought of attempting a settlement of them by any other means. So much for the justice of the sneer in which Johnson found it so pleasant to indulge. While these preliminaries were in process, Milton had ample opportunity of seeing the extent to which the Royalists were influenced by prejudice and misconception, and the importance of attempting to lead the mind of the Parliamentarians themselves more thoroughly to the root of the quarrel. He might have done this in Parliament had his countrymen given him a place there. As circumstances were, the only channel through which he could do the State some service was that of the press; and very glad at any time would his enemies have been if he could have been induced to forego such means of assault, and to have taken to the coarser weapons which multitudes could wield as well or better than himself. The work issued by Milton in 1641 was intitled, Of Reformation in England, and the Causes that hitherto have Hindered it. Written to a Friend. The writer had shown in his Lycidas, that the condition of the Anglican Church was far from being satisfactory to him. It is in the following eloquent words that he describes the dawn and promise of the Reformation in the sixteenth century — “But to dwell no longer in characterising the depravities of the Church, and how they sprang, and how they took increase; when I recall to mind at last, after so the LIFE of John MILTON. xxxi many dark ages, wherein the huge overshadowing train of error had almost swept all the stars out of the firmament of the Church; how the bright and blissful Reformation (by Divine power) strook through the black and settled night of ignorance and anti-Christian tyranny, methinks a sovereign and reviving joy must needs rush into the bosom of him that reads or hears, and the sweet odour of the returning Gospel imbathe his soul with the fragrancy of heaven. Then was the sacred Bible sought out of the dusty corners where profane falsehood and neglect had thrown it; the schools opened, divine and human learning raked out of the embers of forgotten tongues, the princes and cities trooping apace to the new erected banner of salvation ; the martyrs, with the irresistible might of weakness, shaking the powers of darkness, and scorning the fiery rage of the old red dragon." From this language the reader will judge of the fervent and earnest style in which this treatise is written. The onward course to have been expected from such a change had been checked. The causes had been many, and among them a bad precedence is given to the bishops, whose love of pomp and power, a natural result of the false position assigned them, is said to have made them the grand corrupters, in place of being, according to their title, spiritual fathers of the Church. This publication must have appeared early in 1641. It was soon followed by the Humble Remonstrance in Favour of Episcopacy, from the pen of Hall, Bishop of Norwich, who was urged to take the field on this question by Archbishop Laud. In answer to the Bishop, a work was speedily issued bearing the title of Smectymnuus, a name formed from the initials of the five Puritan divines who were concerned in producing it. This rejoinder brought Archbishop Usher into the conflict. Milton replied to his lordship's Apostolical Institution of Episcopacy in two treatises, intitled, Of Prelatical Effiscopacy, and Reasons of Church Government. Bishop Hall now published a defence of his Remonstrance, which was quickly followed by Animadversions from Milton. All these publications made their appearance before the close of 1641. Deep, manifestly, was the impression made by Milton's writings. In 1642, a volume came forth intitled, A Modest Confutation against a Slanderous and Scurrilous Libel. This was generally regarded as coming from the pen of Bishop Hall's son. To the unprincipled attacks made upon Milton's private character in this work, he replied triumphantly in his Apology for Smectymnuus. The issue of the passionate controversy on this subject was to be seen, first in the removal of the bishops from the House of Lords, and, finally, in the suppression of the order. To show how far the writings of Milton contributed to this result, it would be necessary to analyse them, and the design of this brief memoir precludes us from dwelling on such questions. xxxii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. The stormy 1641 and 1642 having passed, we find Milton left in com- parative quiet to his pupils, or to meditate on his great intended poem, of which he had spoken, in anticipation, in lofty terms, in his Apology for Smectymnuus. Remembering the pains Milton has taken to set forth his views on education, we are naturally curious to see him at work in that direction. Unfortunately, the result is far from realising our high expectations. Under the tutoring of the author of Comus, and of L'Allegro and Il Penseroso, youth, we should suppose, would be trained in the reading of the most finished and fascinating authors the classical library could furnish. But this is far from being the case. Books which we should have expected to see in the foremost place in the course, such as Virgil, Horace, and Ovid, are passed over in favour of Lucretius, Manlius, and of some of the dullest and least intelligible prose authors in the language. No mention is made of Tacitus, Livy, or Cicero. In the Greek course, we do not find a single tragedian, orator, or even an historian, with the exception of some fragments from Xenophon. Milton's idea seems to have been, that if a knowledge of the language was acquired, a perception of its beauties would come of itself. We should add that the pupils in this unique establishment were required to learn Hebrew, and to read it in connec- tion with the Chaldee and Syriac. Modern languages, too, were not forgotten; and on Sundays Milton accompanied the reading of the New Testament in Greek with exposition, and with something in the way of lectures, or a scheme of divinity. - Johnson inquires satirically for the great men produced by this “wonder- working academy.” An educator of youth should have known that the function of a preceptor is to train capacity, and that where the capacity for great things does not chance to exist, it is in vain to expect them. There was, we doubt not, much more in Milton's teaching than could be made to appear in any printed outline. An authority likely to be well informed says, that he made his nephews capable of interpreting a Latin author at sight in a twelvemonth, and that as he was severe on one hand, so he was most familiar and free in his conversation to those whom he must serve in the way of education.” His nephew Philips remarks, that had his pupils received his instructions “with the same acuteness and wit of comprehension, the same industry, alacrity, and thirst after knowledge as the instructor was indued with, what prodigies of wit and learning might they have proved 1" We learn, also, from this last authority, that Milton had personal friends at this time who were reckoned among “the beaux of those days,” and that with them he now and then had his seasons of relaxation and holiday—days as welcome to his pupils, we may be sure, as to himself. " Aubrey. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xxxiii In some of those “gaudy" days, as they are called, and in some days of a more sober complexion, Milton, we can imagine, was enough like ourselves to have felt occasionally that it is not good for man to be alone. But a protracted and romantic courtship, at this juncture, would not have comported well with his deep interest in public affairs, or with his feeling as to the service which it became him to render to his country. At that time a family of the name of Powell was residing at Forest Hill, about four miles from Oxford. Richard Powell was at the head of a large family, was a magistrate, and kept up the establishment of a country gentleman Before the father of the poet left Bread Street, there had been intercourse, and money transactions of some importance, between him and Powell, and in these pecuniary matters Milton was himself formally and legally interested." On the removal of the Miltons to Horton, we can suppose that the two families, from the lessened distance between them, would meet more frequently. However this may have been, we are told by the poet's nephew, who was then under his roof, that about Whitsuntide in 1643, “He took a journey into the country, nobody about him certainly knowing the reason, or that it was more than a journey of recreation. After a month's stay, home he returns a married man who set out a bachelor, his wife being Mary, the eldest daughter of Richard Powell, then a justice of the peace of Forest Hill, near Shotover, in Oxfordshire.” Milton had a money claim on his father-in-law at the time of his marriage, but he was to receive, and we presume along with the payment of his debt, 41,000 with his bride. No portion, however, of debt or dowry, for reasons which will be mentioned, ever came to him. Milton removed about this time to his new home in Barbican, and to that house he brought his wife, with whom came some of her relations, and feasting took place there for Some days, in celebration of the nuptials, and for the entertainment of the bride's friends. Mary Powell, we imagine, must have been a pleasant person to look upon. Bºt what other agreeable qualities she possessed, remained, it would seem, in great part to be discovered. Only a few weeks after her coming to London, a letter came, inviting Mrs. Milton to return for a short time into the country. The lady was disposed to comply with this request, and had probably caused it to be sent. Her husband complied with her wishes, but urged that her return should not be later than Michaelmas. Michaelmas came, but the truant wife did not make her appearance. Milton wrote once and again, but his letters were not even answered, and a special messenger sent, is said to have been dismissed with some sort of contempt. Milton was eminently a chaste man. He must have flattered himself with the hope of happiness in married life. But that hope had now vanished. Masson's Life of Milton. xxxiv. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Who was to blame for this state of things? Men given to public life may make affectionate husbands, but there will of necessity be limits to their uxoriousness. Women who marry such men should not only be women who wish their husbands to be somebody, but women willing to bear the cost; and the women of that type are few. Looking to the high regions of thought in which the mind of Milton was so often found, to his warm temperament, and the haughty resoluteness of will which characterised him, it must be confessed that the chances of a happy marriage in his case, did not seem to be great. It is pleaded in favour of Mary Powell, that her family were Royalists, that their house, generally cheerful, had probably been made more gay than usual of late by the presence of cavaliers, who had their quarters at that time with the king at Oxford, and that the transition from domestic life in the residence of her father, to what she found with Milton in Barbican, was more than she could bear. In reply, it is sufficient to say, that the principles of Milton, and the earnestness with which he avowed them, were known to the nation, so that they could not have been a secret at Forest Hill, and it was to have been expected that the dwelling which he owned would be no scene of frivolity, but the home of graceful and thoughtful occupation. About the time of the marriage the prospects of the Parliamentary cause were somewhat gloomy. To many, and especially to the king's party about Oxford, it seemed highly probable that the scale would turn in favour of the Royalists, and it is supposed by Milton's nephew, Phillips, that this consideration weighed with the family, leading them to attempt to shake off a connection which, in the probable course of affairs, might be to their disadvantage. If such was really their motive, we need not say anything to expose its selfishness, injustice, and cruelty. - But it is not, we think, to be denied, that both John Milton and Mary Powell had made a mistake. Mary Powell's unfitness for her new relation, seems to have consisted, not so much in her love of gaiety, for her tempera- ment was more phlegmatic than vivacious, but rather in her want of capacity to make herself agreeable to an intelligent husband. It may be said that Milton himself ought to have seen this defect beforehand, and should have abstained from such a connection; and it is a fact that he was not without misgiving on this point. The family however persuaded him that such appearances were natural in such a female at such a time, and would soon wear away. But whatever Milton may have found in his wife that he could have wished to be otherwise, to his honour, he was prepared to abide by the consequences of the step he had taken. Milton did not discard Mary Powell; Mary Powell deserted Milton, and insult was added to desertion, both by herself and her friends. It is to be remembered that Milton lived to have three wives. With his second wife his connection was one of unmingled happiness. His THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. XXXV beautiful sonnet to her memory warrants us in saying thus much. With his third wife he lived through the last ten years of his life very affectionately; and of the magnanimous conduct of which he was capable both towards Mary Powell and her ungenerous relatives, we shall have evidence presently. Milton, as he approached middle life, was no doubt a man of Some quickness and strength of temper, and in his later years had painful thoughts on the infirmity and depravity possible to women. But while firm in his opinion as to the pre- cedence which the stronger sex should take of the weaker, his conception of the charm that may be found in woman's nature, and of the homage that manhood might with fitness render to it, we see in his descriptions of Eve, and of the lady in Comus, and in other portions of his writings. He was evidently of Sheridan's opinion, that women are both worse and better too than men. But left thus alone—worse than alone—Milton began to meditate on the means of extricating himself from this difficulty. The question came to be, Is the marriage bond indissoluble, except in the cases limited by existing law P And the conclusion to which he came, after a wide course of reading and much thought, was, that divorce might take place on other grounds than those usually acknowledged. In 1644, the year following his marriage, he addressed a treatise to the Parliament, intitled The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce. He then found that the opinion he had broached on this subject had been avowed by Martin Bucer, in an address to Edward VI., and he reprinted the judgment of the reformer, with a preface and postscript. By this time the Presbyterians had become ascendant, and great was the storm which they raised against this new doctrine. They procured that John Milton, as a demoraliser of the com- munity, should be summoned to the bar of the House of Lords; but their lordships shared little in this furor; the accused was honourably dismissed. In 1645 Milton published another treatise on this question, intitled Tetra- chorden, being an exposition of the four principal passages of Scripture relating to it. One more publication appeared on this subject, intitled Colasterion. Some anonymous writer had attempted an answer to the Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce, and this last production of Milton on this controversy consisted of a reply to that answer. The opinions he now avowed were never abandoned, and those who accepted them were sometimes called Miltonists. The substance of his doctrine was “that other reasons of divorce besides adultery were by the law of Moses, and are yet to be allowed by the Christian magistrate, as a piece of justice, and that the words of Christ are not hereby contraried ; next, that to prohibit absolutely any divorce whatever, except those which Moses excepted, is against the reason of law. The grand position is this—that indisposition, unfitness, or contrariety of mind, arising from a cause in nature unchangeable, hindering, and ever likely to hinder, the main benefits of conjugal Society, which xxxvi - THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. are solace and peace, is a greater reason of divorce than adultery, provided there be a mutual consent for separation.” " - But these were not the only publications from the pen of Milton during the two years through which he is present to us as a deserted husband. In 1644. at the request of his friend Hartlib, he sent forth his Tractate on Balucation, which has been generally regarded as exhibiting a Utopian scheme on that subject, aiming at a fulness of acquisition and culture in youth that can be realised only through years and experience. It rarely happens that men of genius make good preceptors. They make their own acquisitions easily, almost by intuition, and they are always in danger of measuring the aptitude of others by their own. The slow and bit-by-bit process in which education really consists, is best in the hands of men of more patience, and, we may perhaps add, of duller faculties. Genius is impulsive, routine is equable—the same to-morrow as to-day, and knows how to wait. - But the year in which the Tractate on Education was published was marked by the appearance of a work of a much higher order—The Areopagitica, or Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing. This discourse Milton addressed to the Parliament, and among his prose writings there is not another more eloquent, nor another so pregnant with truths of permanent significance and worth. Men are virtuous, says Milton, when they reject evil from choice, not when barred from it by necessity. “I cannot praise a fugitive and a cloistered virtue,” he writes, “unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and seeks her adversary, but slinks out of the race where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat.” The Parliament had issued an order to regulate printing, which said, “That no book, pamphlet, or paper shall be henceforth printed unless the same be first approved and licensed by such, or at least one of such, as shall be thereto appointed.” Milton urges the Parliament to re-consider this order; to remember that this subjection of authorship to the ignorance or caprice of a censor owes its origin to recent times; and to guard against the delusion of supposing that any such law will suffice to prevent the printing of bad books. On the contrary, he maintains, that its effect must be “primely to the discouragement of all learning, and the stop of truth, not only by disexercising and blunting our abilities in what we know already, but by hindering and cropping the discovery that might be yet further made both in civil and religious wisdom.” The principle, he argues, that would put an end to the freedom of the press on the plea that error must not be pro- mulgated, should put an end to controversy altogether, inasmuch as no man can refute an error without publishing the error supposed to be refuted. We do not * Fletcher. Introduction to Milton's Prose Works. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xxxvii punish bad men because they are supposed to be capable of doing bad things. We wait until the bad things are done. Let it be so with books. In reasoning thus, Milton must have been aware that full license to print would be an uncertain sign of liberty, if the laws concerning treason, sedition, libel, and alleged blasphemy were not brought more into accordance with that article of freedom. License to print as we please would be a small privilege, if the Government should retain the power to punish for so doing pretty much as it may please. Milton, in assuming that his liberty of unlicensed printing would be a real liberty, must have looked to further reformation in these collateral forms. But the nineteenth century was to come before this vision was to be realised in our history. e - e Milton, however, had many friends, who, knowing his opinions on this vital question, entreated him to print, and many more responded to his utterances when he had so done. The influence of the leaven thus diffused on the course of legislation, if not wholly successful, was not inconsiderable. The action of the licenser under the Long Parliament was checked and limited by opinion as thus enlightened. One functionary resigned the odious office ; and under Cromwell it was abolished. With many words like the following did Milton deliver his expostulation and warning:—“I shall for neither friend nor foe conceal what the general murmur is; that if it come to inquisitioning again, and licensing, and that we are so timorous of ourselves, and suspicious of all men, as to fear each book, and the shaking of every leaf, before we know what the contents are; if some who but of late were little better than silenced from preaching, shall come now to silence us from reading, except what they please, it cannot be guessed what is intended by some but a second tyranny over learning, and will soon put it out of controversy, that bishops and presbyters are the same to us both name and thing.” But the bard kindles, as if in prophetic vision with his theme. London was to him a great spiritual arsenal, in which weapons of all kinds were in course of preparation, that great achievements might follow. “Methinks I see in my mind a noble and puissant nation, rousing herself like a strong man after sleep, and shaking her invincible locks: methinks I see her as an eagle muing her mighty youth, and kindling her undazzled eyes at the full midday beam ; purging and unscaling her long-abused sight at the fountain itself of heavenly radiance; while the whole noise of timorous and flocking birds, with those also that love the twilight, flutter about, amazed at what she means, and in their envious gabble would prognosticate a year of sects and Schisms.” Our readers must turn to this speech, must read and ponder it, to have a just impression as to the lofty and prophetic spirit which pervades it. - In 1645 Milton published a collection of his poems, including a number of sonnets written during that year. The new Sonnets were those on the noise f xxxviii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. which had been raised by the author's publications on the divorce question; also those on Lawrence, Cyriacé Skinner, and Henry Lawes, and those on Lady Margaret Ley, and 24 Virtuous Young Lady. In the preface to this volume, Moseley, the publisher, says: “The poems of Spenser, in these English ones, are as nearly imitated as Sweetly excelled.” The young lady in whose praise one of the new sonnets is written is supposed to have been a Miss Davis, to whom Milton, in his deserted state, began to look in hope of finding in her a second wife. The lady, who is described as young and handsome, and of a respectable family, hesitated, we are told, about committing herself to a relationship, which, however agreeable it might have been in other respects, could not fail to subject her to much social injury and obloquy. Meanwhile, a sudden change was to take place in the circumstances of Milton, of a nature to put an end to the suit. The summer of 1645 gave the Parliamentarians the crowning victory of Naseby. The Royal cause was prostrated from that day. The Powells now saw that an alliance with Milton would be not only safe, but might be advantageously acknowledged. The woman's heart in Mary Powell, too, we have reason to think, had its relent- ings; and the rumour that her husband was seeking another partner for his home, may not have tended to render her less dissatisfied with the present state of matters. It was while affairs were in this posture, that Milton paid a visit to a friend named Blackborough, in St. Martin's-le-Grand. Blackborough was not alone among the friends of Milton in wishing to see the breach between himself and his wife healed, and this visit was chosen as an occasion on which to ascertain if this might not be accomplished. Mrs. Milton was stationed in an inner room. She presently made her appearance, threw herself at the feet of her husband, and entreated, with tears, and by the affectionate memories of the past, that she might be forgiven. It is said that Milton at first hesitated; but he was at length subdued, and when he declared the past forgiven, we may be sure that it was so. No one can doubt that the poet's description of Adam's reconciliation to Eve was written with a vivid remembrance of the feeling awakened by this scene. In the following year Mr. R. Powell, of Forest Hill, was “in the city and garrison of Oxford at the surrender thereof.” In the State Paper Office is a document signed by General Fairfax, of the 27th of June, 1646, giving Powell full liberty to pass the guards, with his servants, horses, arms, goods, and all other necessaries, and to repair unto London or elsewhere upon his necessary occasions. Powell and his large family made their way to the capital, where the son-in-law whom they had so deeply wronged and insulted received them under his roof, and gave them a home during many months. A few weeks after these arrivals Milton's first child was born. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xxxix ‘The last Latin poem by Milton was written early in 1647. This was the Ode on john Rouse, the keeper of the Bodleian Library. Early in 1646 his wife's father had died under his roof. Twelve months later, his own father, who had been for some years a quiet inmate with him, breathed his last. His house being gradually freed from the members of his wife's family, and the death of his father having probably rendered him more independent of tuition, Milton removed sometime in 1647 from his large house in Barbican to a smaller in Holborn. The house in Holborn, it is said, opened backwards into Lincoln's Inn Fields—a space which better answered to its name at that time than at present. In the house at Holborn, Milton's second daughter, Mary, was born During 1648 Milton translated nine in his series of translated Psalms. That year was not favourable to tranquil studies in the case of any man feeling as an Englishman should have felt in relation to public affairs. The king's party had been everywhere dispersed. Charles had become a prisoner, first with the Scots, then with the English Presbyterians, and then with the Independents. The Independents, and especially Cromwell, were concerned not only to spare the life of the king, but, if possible, to come to some settlement with him. But his majesty's procrastinations, intrigues, and duplicities, not only frustrated all hope of that nature, but exasperated the men who would have served him, and convinced the army that his life would never be any- thing but a tissue of conspiracies against the lives of the persons who had dared to resist his will. What were the thoughts of Milton concerning events as they tended towards this result? Where was he when Charles appeared before the high court of justice? Where, when that discrowned head fell upon the scaffold 2 We know not. But we know that in his mind, in common with his countrymen generally, the war waged had not been waged against monarchy. The object of the strife had been to settle the monarchy on a constitutional basis that should be compatible with liberty. That issue failing, the alternative was a republic; and when that came, men were heard to say, “We have not sought this, but it has come; and seeing in it, as we do, the will of a Power above our own, we give our adhesion to it, and, if needs be, reason enough can be shown to justify us in so doing.” Milton was one of these men. On the death of the king, the Presbyterians raised a loud lament, and dis- charged the most bitter invectives against the Independents, as the alleged perpetrators of that deed. Milton, who could have excused anything of that sort from the old Royalists, or from the ignorant among the people, could not brook it as coming from that quarter. Hence, a few weeks after the king's death, he sent forth his pamphlet, intitled The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates, the design of which, in so far as it touched on the proceedings against Charles, was said to be “rather to reconcile the minds of men to the event, than to discuss the xl THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. ſegitimacy of that particular sentence.” The argument itself, however, goes further than these words would indicate. The proposition it is designed to prove is given in the following words: “That it is lawful, and hath been held so through all ages, for any who have the power, to call to account a tyrant, or wicked king, and, after due conviction, to depose, and put him to death, if the ordinary magistrate have neglected or denied to do it.” It is further shown that the Presbyterians, who now so much blame the deposing of the king, were themselves the men who long since deposed the monarch in the Senate, and levelled their instruments of death against him in the field. The startling facts, and the high-handed logic of this publication, wounded the Presbyterians deeply. They had denounced Milton before, they denounced him more than ever now. But the object of the writer was not so much to conciliate that party, as to compel them to silence, by exposing their inconsistency and insincerity. The next voice from Milton was in his Observations on the Articles of Peace with the Irish Rebels. Those articles, drawn up by Ormond, the Lord- Lieutenant, in the name of the king, demonstrated that Charles, contrary to his most Solemn pledges, was prepared to secure his objects by the aid of the Irish Catholics, and by any amount of deception that might serve his purpose. The signatures attached to this compact were written only thirteen days before the unhappy king was led to execution. “Such,” says Milton, “were the fruits of my private studies, which I gratuitously presented to the Church and to the State, and for which I was recompensed by nothing but impunity, though the acts themselves procured me peace of conscience and the approbation of the good, while I exercised that freedom of discussion which I loved. Others, without labour or desert, got possession of honours and emoluments; but no one ever knew me either soliciting anything myself or through the medium of my friends—ever beheld me in a suppliant posture at the doors of the senate, or the levees of the great. I usually kept myself secluded at home, where my own property, part of which had been withheld during the civil commotions, and part of which had been absorbed in the oppressive con- tributions which I had to sustain, afforded me a scanty subsistence. When I was released from these engagements, and thought that I was about to enjoy an interval of uninterrupted ease, I turned my thoughts to a history of my country, from the earliest times to the present.” This English history was a favourite subject with Milton, but he was not to bring his narrative lower than to the Conquest. As a history, it is of no great value to us; but as giving us the thoughts of Milton, and as calling forth his powers of description in relation to such a series of events, the fragment must always be interesting. Its occasional comparisons between past the LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xli and present, though deemed irrelevant then, are not among its least instructive portions to us. - But the time had now come in which the man who had never sought place for himself was to be raised to an honourable position by the unbought patronage of the State. Milton was invited by the Government to become Secretary for Foreign Tongues. His recent pamphlet had done the State some service, and his competency to the vacant office was above that of any other man to whom it could have been assigned. The President of the Council was the great lawyer, Bradshaw, and we have seen that the mother of the poet was said to have been a Bradshaw. Milton accepted the appointment on the 13th of March, 1649, and on the 15th was formally admitted to his new function— a function which was not to be a sinecure in his hands. In the judgment of many, the execution of the king was a great crime, and, judged by its effects, it was certainly a great error. Of course, it would hold forth a warning to crowned heads that might not be unwholesome, and any other course that might have been taken would have been beset with extra- ordinary difficulties. But the feeling of the nation was deeply offended by what had been done, and over a large surface the wound was such as not to admit of being healed. In this state of feeling a heavy blow was inflicted on the new Commonwealth by the publication of the Eikon Basilike. That book of devotions was fabricated to set forth the late king as a person of singular devoutness and sanctity, in all the habits of his private life. Even in that age of slow inter- :ommunication, the book flew through the country, edition after edition, with surprising rapidity. In answer to the Eikon Basilike (the Royal Image), Milton sent forth one of the most elaborate of his writings, under the title of Iconoclastes (the Image-breaker). The aim of this publication was, of course, to state the case of the Parliament as against the king, and to demonstrate the falsity of the pretensions set up in his favour. It was a second Grand Remonstrance, and could not fail to serve the Commonwealth. But the conduct of the Parliament and of the Army towards the king gave hardly less offence abroad than at home. Towards the close of this year, Claude Saumaise, better known as Salmasius, published his Defensio Regia £ro Carlo Primo ad Carolam Secundum. The author of this work was a scholar of the first rank, and of great celebrity. In the course of his argument the divine right of kings is openly and emphatically asserted, and all sorts of learning are laid under contribution to show that sovereigns owe no responsibility to subjects, but to God only. Such reasoning would have done little harm in England, but it was seasoned with much foul abuse of our country, and was adapted to mislead foreigners. Such, indeed, was the impression made by this performance, that in January, 1650, we find it ordered in Council, that “Mr. Milton xlii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. do prepare something in answer to the book of Salmasius.” The treatise, when produced, was ordered to be printed, and thanks were voted to the author. As the work of Salmasius was in Latin, the reply was in the same language. It bore the title Defensio pro Populo Anglicano. . Salmasius was grossly misinformed concerning the real state of things in England, and from carelessness, and contempt of the persons whom he assailed, he fell into many blunders not creditable to his general scholarship. Manifestly, nothing was further from his thoughts than that an antagonist like Milton would be sent forth to meet him—an opponent keen to detect every slip, and strong to expose it when detected. His extreme servility, and the arrogance and insolence of his manner generally, were such that Milton knew not how to speak of him in subdued terms. This, it must be remembered, was the secret of the invective, the sarcasm, the ridicule, and of the degrading epithets which the Englishman discharged so fiercely and so pitilessly against his adversary. His agility and force in this conflict, remind you of nothing so much as of the skill and daring of some chieftain among the ancient athletae when in the heat of the strife. By every blow, he seems to tell you, that the foe before him deserves no mercy, and shall have none. But his passion is not so ascendant as to impair his logic, or to prevent his availing himself of his stores of learning. His defence of the rights of humanity against every form of oppression is almost uniformly just, and rises at times to a grandeur which subdues you by its elevation and awfulness. It was only natural that a fight between such Titans should attract the attention of the learned, and of educated men generally, over Europe. It was a rare thing to see two such combatants face to face. Some said that Milton had killed his opponent, who never seemed to be the same man again, and died the next year. Others denied that assertion. But it was impossible that such a handling should have failed to produce a bitter vexation. From this time the feeling on the Continent hostile to the English Parliament was much changed. The fame of Milton became second only to that of Cromwell, and the light of the one and the power of the other were accepted widely as representing the | influences which had raised England to her new position. When Milton received the order of the Council to write this work, his sight, which had shown symptoms of weakness through some ten years past, had declined in an alarming degree during the last two years. His medical advisers assured him, that to attempt to obey the instruction of the Govern- ment, would be to lose his last remnant of vision—to become blind His answer, deliberately given, was, “Then let blindness come." And the blindness * Salmasius left a reply in MS., which was printed amidst the excitement of the Restoration, eight years after his decease. Its extraordinary virulence betraved the rankling of the wound that had been inflicted. The work attracted little attention. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xliii came, as had been predicted. But to his last hour of life it was his solace to remember, that this falling of a dark curtain between himself and the visible universe, had come from such a cause. “Cyriack, this three years' day these eyes, though clear, Bereft of light, their seeing have forgot. What supports me, dost thou ask? The conscience, friend, to have lost them overplied In liberty's defence, my noble task.” Eight years were to pass, and nothing more was to be heard of Salmasius in this controversy. But it was not to be supposed that the Defence of the People of England, with the praises of which Europe “rang from side to side,” would pass without some attempted answers. Several were issued, and left to their fate. One published anonymously Milton attributed to Bishop Bramhall. Its author, however, was an unknown episcopal clergyman named Rowland. To this piece John Phillips, one of Milton's nephews, wrote a reply, which the poet himself revised before publication. - . We have seen that in 1649 Milton removed from Barbican to Holborn. On accepting his appointment as secretary, he removed to apartments assigned him in Whitehall, but, from some unknown cause, he was required to vacate his new quarters, and some time after the midsummer of 1651, he took a pretty garden-house in Petty France, in Westminster, next door to Lord Scudamore's, opening into St. James's Park. In this house Milton continued until the Restoration—eight years." As the blindness of Milton came upon him by slow degrees, it has not been found easy to fix on the exact time at which his sight may be said to have totally failed. One of his opponents describes him as blind in 1652. This alone would not be sufficient evidence; but Milton, in his reply to this writer, so expresses himself as to warrant us in fixing the event in that year. In a letter to a friend, dated September, 1654, he states, that during ten years he had felt his sight grow “weak and dim;” and he describes the process of the privation until light had “faded into a uniform blackness, such as ensues on the extinguishing of a candle.” “When I sate down,” he says, “to read as usual in the morning, my eyes gave me considerable pain, and refused their office till fortified by moderate exercise of body. If I looked at a candle it appeared surrounded with an iris. In a little a darkness covering the left side of the left eye, which was partially clouded some years before the other, intercepted the view of all things in that direction. Objects also in front seemed to dwindle in size whenever I closed my right eye. This eye, too, for three years gradually failing, a few months previous to my total * Phillips's Life of Milton. xliv THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. blindness, while I was perfectly stationary, and now thick vapours appear to settle on my forehead and temples, which weigh down my lids with an oppressive sense of drowsiness, especially in the interval between dinner and the evening. I ought not to omit mentioning that before I wholly lost my sight, as soon as I lay down in bed, and turned upon either, side, brilliant flashes of light used to issue from my closed eyes; and afterwards, upon the gradual failure of my powers of vision, colours, proportionately dim and faint, seemed to rush out with a degree of vehemence and a kind of inward noise.” But after 1652 these vestiges of the departing light recurred no more. The only work in reply to his Defence of the People of England which Milton condescended to answer was a publication, intitled Regii Sanguinis Clamor ad Caelum adversus Parricidis Anglicanos (The Cry of Royal Blood to Heaven against the Fnglish Parricides). The author of this work was a Peter Du Moulin, resident in England, but of French origin. We learn from himself that the manuscript was sent to Salmasius, who entrusted the printing of it to a person named Moore—Latinised “Morus”—a Scotchman, who was then Principal of the Protestant College of Castres, in Languedoc. The volume bore no name except that of the printer; but under that name Morus himself wrote a dedication of the work to Charles II. Milton somehow came to know that Morus had been concerned in sending forth this work, and fastened upon him as its author. His Second Defence, thus provoked, was published in 1654; and as the work to be dealt with was full of the grossest assaults on his private character, Milton was led by this circumstance to vindicate himself against all such aspersions, and at the same time to give the world his judgment as to the character of the men who had become most conspicuous in originating and Sustaining the English Commonwealth. The biographical value of this Second Defence is great. We owe thus much to the short-sighted malignity of Milton's assailants. Morus attempted a reply, which Milton answered, and to a second rejoinder he added a supplement. But the controversy was exhausted. In 1653 Milton became a widower. His wife is said to have died in her last confinement. During the next three years, while engaged in discussing questions of the greatest public interest, and in the sight of Europe, his home, there is reason to fear, was not in a satisfactory state. His wife had left him blind, with three children, all girls, the youngest only two years old, and the eldest not more than eight. We learn from himself, that much as he had served the Commonwealth, he was never made in any degree the richer by such labour. His income, accordingly, must have consisted in his salary as Secretary, at best somewhat less than 4,300 a year, and in his private means. In 1655, * Symmons's Life of Milton. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xlv his blindness having rendered it necessary that he should be assisted in his office, his salary was reduced to £150 a year, which was assigned to him as to be his for his life. Soon afterwards, his faithful friend Andrew Marvel, was appointed his coadjutor in his official duty—an appointment which appears to have been made at his own suggestion." - It was when his personal circumstances had assumed this posture that Milton married his second wife. This lady was a Miss Woodcock, daughter of Captain Woodcock, of Hackney. How the domestic affairs of Milton had been managed during the last three years is not known; but that the three young children were neglected, as they would not have been by a mother of only ordinary intelligence, is highly probable. With Catherine Woodcock Milton realised a happiness in married life hitherto unknown to him, and the children, we can imagine, began to show signs of improvement under her influence. But this gleam of sunshine sent through the home of the poet was to be of short duration. Fifteen months after her marriage his wife died in her confinement, and the infant did not live. The following beautiful sonnet expresses the feeling with which Milton never ceased to regard this sainted woman — “Methought I saw my late-espoused saint Brought to me, like Alcestis, from the grave, Whom Jove's great son to her glad husband gave, Rescued from Death by force, though pale and faint. Mine, as whom washed from spot of child-bed taint, Purification in the old law did save, And such, as yet once more I trust to have Full sight of her in heaven without restraint, Came vested all in white, pure as her mind: Her face was veiled ; yet to my fancied sight Love, sweetness, goodness in her person shined So clear, as in no face with more delight. • But, oh! as to embrace me she inclined, I waked; she fled ; and day brought back my night.” Eight eventful years were to pass before Milton was to marry again The division of labour, as touching his office as Secretary, must have given him more command of time. He still occupied himself with his History of Bngland, and he now began to make collections towards an improved Latin dictionary, and occupied himself in digesting materials for a body of divinity. But soon after he became a widower a second time, his thoughts began to settle on the Fall of Man as the subject for his long-contemplated epic poem. According to his friend Aubrey, he had commenced that great work in 1658. Even now, however, his time was not to be given to it more than partially In 1658 he publishes, from manuscript, Sir Walter Raleigh's work, intitled The Cabinet Council. In 1659 he issues his valuable treatise on Civil Power in Ecclesiastical Cases, and a vigorous pamphlet on the Means of Removing * Mitford—Masson. xlvi THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Hirelings out of the Church. In this year also he wrote a letter to a friend concerning the ruptures of the Commonwealth, and another to General Monk in favour of a free Commonwealth, and describing the present means of securing it. But these were brief ordinary letters, extending to a page or two, and were not printed. The pamphlet published some months later, intitled The Ready and Easy way to Establish a Free Commonwealth, was something much more elaborate, and was addressed to the nation. In this performance Milton urges, with much earnestness, the excellency of a Com- monwealth, “compared with the inconveniences and dangers of re-admitting kingship in this nation.” Another fragment was published by him at this juncture in reply to a sermon of a high Royalist tone preached by a Dr. Matthew Griffith, described as “Chaplain to the late King.” In these two pieces Milton delivers his last protest against the return of Stuart rule. Almost to the moment when the guns of Dover Castle were to proclaim the landing of His Majesty Charles II., Milton's voice is raised in this cause. 13ut the nation heard not, and Court and country hastened to fulfil the worst predictions uttered by Cromwell long since, and now reiterated by Milton. The most sober portion of the people had become weary of a war of factions, of disorder sinking deeper and deeper into confusion, and were willing to hope that the reports circulated everywhere, as to the wise and patriotic intentions of the exiled King, would prove to be well founded. That hope was to prove vain. But the unwelcome experience came too late. What had been done could not be undone. - During the eight years preceding the Restoration Milton had lived in his detached house in Petty France, near the centre of all the actions of those years in relation to the great questions both of Church and State. Under that roof he had been wont to receive his friends, so that there we can imagine Syriac Skinner discoursing freely on the recent debates in Parliament, or in his club, and on the tendencies of public affairs. There Andrew Marvel's honest voice was often heard on such topics, and in sharp and witty criticism on poetry, and on literature generally. There Robert Boyle often spoke, as we may believe, to his blind friend on the most recent experiments in philosophy, and passed from the mysteries of nature to express his devout thoughts concerning its Author. Milton's writings show that many of the most distinguished men, both in the army and the state, were personally known to him, and such men were, no doubt, to be seen from time to time by his fireside. But with Milton, as with Bacon, the admiration of his genius by his countrymen was surpassed in that manifested by distinguished foreigners. During the years under review he was the great Englishman whom most strangers wished to see, next to Cromwell. And it is certain that many a flattering pilgrimage of that nature was made to his humble dwelling. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. xlvii But with the Restoration all is changed. Milton must have felt that his life had ceased to be secure. His political career was at an end, and silence in the future could not be regarded as enough to protect him against the consequences of the past. He now left Petty France, and found an asylum with a friend in Bartholomew Close. Proclamation was issued for his appre- hension, but he had friends able and willing to serve him. His brother-in-law, Sir Thomas Clarges; Morrice, Secretary of State, "cousin to General Monk; Andrew Marvel, who had a seat in Parliament; two distinguished Royalist aldermen of York; and above all, Sir William Davenant, are mentioned as having used influence in his favour. Even among his enemies there were men who could not think of his blindness without pity, nor of his genius without respect. It has been said that some of his friends reported him as dead, and got up a mock funeral to divert the Government from its threatened search after him. Such an expedient would have been innocent enough, though we cannot suppose that Milton would have been any party to it. Had anything of this nature been true, the wits of the court of Charles would not have left it to come down to us from a date long after the event. In June, 1660, the Commons moved that Milton's Iconoclastes and his Defence of the People of England should be burnt by the hangman, and in August that was done. But an act of indemnity was then passed, which spared the life of the author, though some months later, and, from some unknown cause, we find him in the keeping of the Sergeant-at-Arms. He was soon released, however, simply on the payment of his fees. With his characteristic independence and fearlessness, he resisted that payment on the ground of its exorbitancy, and the demand was reduced. On leaving his retreat in Bartholomew Close, Milton took a house in Holborn, near Red Lion Square, but removed after a short interval to Jewin Street. Here he published a work on the Accidence and Grammar of the Zatin Language; also Aphorisms of State, from another manuscript left by Sir Walter Raleigh. We have to add, that to his house in Jewin Street Milton brought his third wife; but this does not seem to have occurred earlier than some time in 1664. The poet's friend, Dr. Paget, recommended to him Elizabeth, daughter of Mr. Robert Minshull, of Wistaston, rear Nantwich, in Cheshire, as a lady who might contribute to his happiness; and a marriage was the result. Milton was now fifty-six years of age. His wife was thirty years his junior. At this time his eldest daughter was nearly eighteen years of age, the second sixteen. . Milton had remained so long unmarried in the hope, apparently, that these daughters would become capable and trustworthy in the management of his affairs; but in these expectations he must have been disappointed. Milton is xlviii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. charged with having conducted himself toward his daughters with little of the feeling to have been expected from him. We submit the case on both sides to the judgment of the reader. - Mistress Foster, a grand-daughter of Milton's, in low circumstances, is described as stating that Milton, besides his alleged harshness toward his daughters, was so indifferent generally in his feeling towards them, that he would not allow them to learn to write. The eldest could not read to him, from some impediment in her speech, but the two younger—So Deborah, the youngest of the two, says—were made to read in eight languages. . As Greek and Hebrew were among these languages, to have been compelled to read much in those tongues, or indeed in any tongue while ignorant of its meaning, must have been not a little disagreeable and exhausting. The poet's nephew, Phillips, relates, that as the young persons complained heavily of this labour, they were at length, all three, sent from home, “to learn some curious and ingenious sorts of manufacture that are proper for women to learn, particularly embroidery in gold and silver.” And the fact that Milton at his death left all his property to his widow, with the exception of what his daughters might claim through their mother from the Powells, has been thought to warrant the unfavourable constructions which have been put on these statements. In reply, it is to be remembered that Mrs. Foster, the poet's grand- daughter, is not an altogether trustworthy witness, for her assertion that Milton would not allow his daughters to learn to write is manifestly untrue, inasmuch as Aubrey says positively that Deborah, the youngest, was amanuensis to her father, and that he taught her Latin, and how to read Greek—that is, to understand the one language, and to read the other. Deborah further says, that though they were not sent to school, they were “taught at home by a mistress kept for that purpose.” This must mean that they were brought up under a governess. To this expenditure was added the cost of enabling them to learn the art of embroidery, and the assistance rendered to them during the last four or five years of his life, when they had ceased to be a part of his household. It is towards the close of those years that he speaks of having “spent the greater part of his estate in providing for them.” He says at the same time that they had been “undutiful and unkind to him ; ” that they were “careless of him being blind, and made nothing of deserting him ; ” that, in place of being the comfort to him he needed, “they did combine together in counseling his maidservant to cheat him in her marketings;" that they had made away with some of his books, and would have sold the rest of his books to the dunghill women; and that Mary, the second in age, being told that her father was about to marry, said that the better news to her would be to hear that he was dead. With regard to Milton's wife, she was twenty-six years of age when she THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. - xlix married, and she is described by Aubrey, who knew her, as “a genteel person, of a peaceful and agreeable humour.” From all that is said of her we may presume that she was a woman of personal attractions. We know that she held her husband in great veneration; that poetry which came to him in the night, she often committed to writing at his dictation early in the day; that she studied his comfort in all things, and proved, in fact, an excellent wife. According to Milton's own words she was a “loving wife;" and his brother Christopher states on oath, that he “complained, but without passion, that his children had been unkind to him, but that his wife had been very kind and careful of him.” In leaving his disposable property to her, which, altogether, would not give her anything beyond the means of a moderate subsistence, he regarded himself as discharging a debt of gratitude. In the compromise ultimately made when the will had been disputed, the daughters were content to receive 4 IOO each as their share. At the same time, the 4 1,000 still due to him from the Powells, acknowledged by persons competent to pay it as an honourable debt, he left his daughters to claim.” “Phillips relates,” says Johnson, “that Mrs. Milton persecuted the children during the life of her husband, and cheated them at his death." It must suffice to say that Phillips has not made that statement, nor any statement at all like it; nor is this the only instance in which Johnson's hostile feeling has betrayed him into infamous representations of this description. The will made in behalf of the widow, and which she very probably induced her husband to make, was the only cheating with which she could be charged; and, with regard to persecution, Deborah might have left a home of reasonable comfort to have been virtually adopted, as she was, by Mrs. Merien; while her elder sisters could hardly have lived from five to six years as young women with their step- mother, had they been subject to grave ill-treatment at her hands. On the whole, in relation to Milton's conduct towards his children, as towards his first wife, without venturing to say that he was without fault, we feel no difficulty in saying that he was a man much more sinned against than sinning.” Milton did not continue long in Jewin Street after his marriage. His * “According to the custom of London, previous to the statute 1 James II., c. 17, Mrs. Milton would be entitled to two-thirds of her husband's effects—one-third as widow, and one-third as administratrix, the remaining third being the property of the children ; and, consequently, £300, the amount paid to them, would represent the full share of their father's estate, if it amounted to no more than £900, even without taking into account any such future payment as, according to a conjecture, hazarded in a note, a clause in the leases may possibly allude to. There is no very strong evidence that it amounted to more than this. Phillips writes that he is said to have died worth £1,500 in money, a considerable estate, all things considered; so that the writer, while giving currency to what may have been his cousin's exaggerated statement of their father's property, seems to intimate his own opinion that it was more than he should have expected'; but Milton himself is proved to have contemplated, as a mere possibility, the event of his property realising more than £1,000, in which case he expressed his wish that his brother Christopher's children should have the overplus, though he probably considered the chances too remote to be worth providing for in his will.”—Cheetham Publications, vol. xxiv. 13. * See these particulars given in some detail by Todd, Mitford, and Keightley, but especially in the Papers connected with Milton and his Family, in vol. xxiv. of the Cheethaz. Publications. l THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. next, and his last, remove was to a house in Artillery Walk, then a pleasant avenue to Bunhill Fields. But he had not been long settled in his new house when he was driven from it by the Plague, which came with such terrible effect over the metropolis in 1665. Milton now took possession for a while of a cottage at Chalfont, in Buckinghamshire, which had been hired for him by his young friend Elwood, the Quaker. By this time he had completed, or very nearly completed, his Paradise Lost. Our earliest information concerning the intention of Milton to write an epic poem comes to us during his continental tour. The eulogy pronounced on him in Florence shows that he must have mentioned some purpose of this kind to his friends in that city. We have seen, that in his poem to Manso of Naples, a few months later, he is explicit on this point; but the subject then in his thoughts was King Arthur and the Knighthood of his Age. In his treatise on Church Government, published in 1641, this purpose is again indicated, and the subject is still King Arthur. We know not how or when the British theme came to be displaced by the Biblical; but in 1658 this change had taken place, and some years before, Phillips and other friends had seen fragments of the poetry, especially the Address of Satan to the Sun, which appeared ultimately in the Paradise Lost. Through some eight or ten years, accordingly, this subject may be said to have occupied the poet's thought, and to have moved him more or less to write upon it; and through seven years preceding its publication, it had been his chosen and settled theme. Milton's earliest conception of the work, as is well known, presented it in the form of a drama. The Milton manuscripts at Cambridge place before us two dramatic schemes on the Fall of Man, framed somewhat in the manner of the old mysteries. Happily that form was abandoned, and very little time would seem to have been wasted upon it. . . . The most potent cause leading to the choice of this higher theme will probably be found in the new current given to Milton's thoughts on his return to England in 1639. While at Cambridge, his discontent with the state of things in the English Church had precluded him from becoming a clergyman. His Lycidas shows that this feeling had grown upon him when that poem was written. But his residence at Horton, and his continental tour, embrace the interval in his career which may be said to have been the brightest, and had his life continued to be of that cheery hue, it is probable that the epic poem would have been on the old British chivalry. But as the quarrel between Charles and the Parliament ripened towards civil war, the grave questions of civil and religious liberty became to him the great questions of the hour, and not only revived the religious spirit observable in his earlier years, but deepened it, and gave it the force of habit. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. li We have mentioned elsewhere how Milton placed the manuscript of Paradise Lost in the hand of Elwood, at Chalfont; and the remark of the poet's Quaker friend, that one who had written so well on Paradise Lost should write on Paradise Regained, which led to the writing of the poem since known by that name. Milton returned to London in 1666, early probably in that year. The check which had been given to book publishing in 1665 by the Plague, was followed in September, 1666, by the Great Fire of London, which must have been felt by authors and booksellers as even a greater discouragement to such enterprises. But Milton had written his Paradise Regained for the most part, if not entirely, away from his books, in his humble retreat at Chalfont; and had written his greater poem amidst the ceaseless distractions occasioned by the agitation and perils which beset the Common- wealth through the first five years of its existence, and amidst the many disheartening events which attended the Restoration. It was in keeping with his elastic energy and hopefulness, that Milton now trod the pathways of the city where the pestilence had lately sent such horrors into every dwelling; and where, from the late fire, whole streets were still in ruins and desolation, his object being to find a bibliopolist who might be courageous enough to undertake the publication of an epic poem in ten books. Milton found the man he sought in the person of Samuel Simmons. Every one has heard of the terms of agreement between the poet and this publisher. The author received 45 when the contract was signed. Should 1,300 of the first edition be sold he was to receive another £5. Should the same number of a second edition be sold he was to receive the same sum, and so of a third edition; and no edition was to exceed 1,500 copies. So the sale of more than 4,000 copies was not to Secure to the author more than £20. The first edition was advertised as neatly bound, and as to be sold for three shillings. Milton's agreement with Simmons was signed April 27th, 1667. On April 26th, 1669, he received his second 45, the sale of the work in two years having reached the required amount, 1,300. The second edition was not printed until 1674, from which Milton did not live to receive anything. So the entire sum which came to his hands for the Paradise Lost was 4 Io. The second edition was sold in four years; and on printing. a third edition, in 1681, Simmons gave Milton's widow 48, as the price of the copyright. From the hands of Simmons that right passed to the bookseller Brabazon Aylmer, who purchased it for £25; and in 1683 it passed from Aylmer to Jacob Tonson, at a considerably higher price. In twenty years six editions were published, and between 7,000 and 8,000 copies must have been sold. In 1688 a handsome folio edition made its appearance, under the patronage of the great Whig lawyer, Lord Somers, giving a list of more than lii THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. 5oo subscribers, including the names of a large number of the most eminent persons in rank and literature. These facts speak much more favourably for the public of that time than for the book trade. - Milton's English History, which had occupied so much of his thoughts at intervals, was not published until 1670. It was then much mutilated by the Licensor, and is supposed by some to have been interpolated afterwards, under the pretence of restoring the suppressed passages. In 1671 appeared the Paradise Regained, along with the Samson Agonistes. In 1673 the poet sent forth his Treatise of True Religion, A.eresy, Schism, Toleration, and what }ust Means may be used against the Growth of Popery. At that time the country was becoming daily more and more alarmed, and not without reason, in the prospect of a Popish successor to the throne, and the possible new ascendancy of Romanism. Milton urges all Protestants to make the keeping out of that common enemy their common cause. In this year also Milton reprinted his early poems, with some additions and corrections, and his Tractate on Education, but in its punctuation, and in some other respects, this edition was less accurate than the former. In 1674, the last year of his life, the venerable bard published his familiar Zetters in Latin, and a translation of the Declaration of the Poles in favour of john III., from the Latin, which appeared in that year, was attributed to him. Milton suffered considerably from gout during his later years, and is said to have died of that malady. On the 8th of November, in the sixty- sixth year of his age, in his house in Bunhill Fields, the spirit of Milton passed into the world of spirits. His decease seems to have taken place without much immediate premonition, but he had for some while the pre- sentiment that it was not distant, and his anticipations of it in the midst of his family were calm, Self-possessed, and without any sign of fear. His remains were placed beside those of his father in the chancel in St. Giles, Cripplegate. Toland says that his funeral was attended. “by all his learned and great friends in London, not without a friendly concourse of the vulgar.” In his person Milton was below rather than above the middle stature." The feminine beauty which distinguished him in his youth, settled into a manly symmetry of features as he grew older. His portraits show that he wore his hair parted in front, and falling in curls on his shoulders. It was of a lightish brown colour, but his eyes were grey, and retained their natural appearance even when light had passed from them. When in the vigour of his days, his air was erect and dauntless. An aged clergyman who had seen him in his later years, describes him as seated in a small chamber hung with rusty green. * Aubrey. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. liii in an elbow chair, dressed in black; pale, but not cadaverous, his hands and fingers gouty, and with chalk stones. He used also to sit, it is said, in a grey, warm cloth coat, at the door of his house near Bunhill Fields, in warm sunny weather, to enjoy the fresh air." And so, as well as in his room, he received the visits of persons of distinguished parts, as well as quality. His gout could not have come from his rich living, inasmuch as his abstemiousness was one of his marked habits. He took little wine, and was very simple in his diet. In early life he injured his sight and his general health by night study; subsequently, he learnt to get a fair night's rest, going to bed at nine, and rising in the summer at four, in the winter at five. Should he not be disposed to rise at that hour, some one commonly read to him. After rising, he listened to the reading of a chapter from his Hebrew Bible. He then followed his studies until midday. After a brief out-door exercise he dined, then played on the organ, or sang, or requested his wife, who had a good voice, to sing to him. He then resumed his mental occupations until, six; from six to eight he received visitors; between eight and nine he took a supper of olives and some light food, smoked his pipe of tobacco, drank his glass of water, and retired to rest. One of his biographers says, he had “a gravity in his temper, not melancholy, or not till the latter part of his life; not sour, nor morose, or ill-natured, but a certain serenity of mind, a mind not condescending to little things.” Aubrey, who says that he was satirical—which, no doubt, he was on the fitting occasion—further says, that “he would be very cheerful even in his gouty fits, and sing.” We learn also from his youngest daughter that “her father was delightful company, the life of the conversation, and that on account of a flow of subject, and an unaffected cheerfulness and civility.” There was a time when the spoils of the vanquished lay thick about him, but he touched them not. He lived a simple and honest life, and lived it to the end. - The biographers of Milton, for the most part, lament that he should have allowed his genius to be diverted as it was during some twenty years, from poetry to politics. But the politics which attracted him were not ordinary politics. The crisis had come in which it was to be determined whether England should be free or not free—the home of a manly liberty, or the puling imitator of the servile monarchies of the Continent. And there are men who are not born to live to themselves, but to their country and to humanity. Such men can take up the cross, and put even the gratification of taste in abeyance, that duty may be done. But such men are comparatively few, and Milton holds a foremost place with that few. His poetry does high honour to his * Richardson's Life of Milton. * Richardson. liv - THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. genius; his services as a patriot do no less honour to his moral worth. He tells us that to have a conscience that should not be perpetually upbraiding him, it was indispensable that he should subordinate even his love of poetry . to the love of his country and of liberty. But, to use his own illustration, in these secular strifes it was his left hand only that was put forth; his right— the higher skill and force of his nature—found its true sphere in higher things. His political writings, however, open as they may be to exception, were a powerful momentum on the side of general freedom; and one which, in common with much like it, did not die out, as is too commonly supposed, at . the Restoration. Without the revolution which dates from 1640, we should hardly have seen that which dates from 1688. But our great poet, as may sometimes be seen in men more native to state questions, was to evince greater skill in demolishing bad things, than in constructing the better things which should come into their place. According to the general apprehension, Milton was a stern republican; but, in fact, he was for government as placed in the hands of the wisest and the best; and whether the wisest and the best might be most probably found in a republic, in an oligarchy, in a monarchy, or in such elements combined, were subordinate questions—questions simply concerning the relation of means to ends. Judging of monarchy from what it had commonly been, and from what it had been recently in this country, he saw no hope for the nation in that direction. Hence the great point with him came to be, how to adjust the machinery of a popular government so as to secure from it the largest measure of advantage, and to guard the most effectively against the disadvantages incident to it. Nothing was further from his thoughts than that the best rule would be the rule of the multitude. He would have had each country town a city, and every such city a sort of Florence or Venice, entrusted with large legislative and administrative powers. Above these he would have placed, not a house of commons, but a grand council, which should be permanent, and possessed of supreme authority; and in giving existence to this council, he says, it would “be well to qualify and refine elections; not committing all to the noise and shouting of a rude multitude, but permitting those of them who are rightly qualified to nominate as many as they will; and out of that number, others of a better breeding to choose a less number more judiciously ; till, after a third or fourth sifting and refining of exactest choice, they only be left chosen who are the due number, and seem by most voices the worthiest.” " It is in vain to say that Milton did not know human nature. But it is clear from these speculations that he had failed duly to estimate some of the * The Ready and Easiest Way to Establish a Free Common awealth. THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. lv most rooted and characteristic tendencies of the English people. Their institutions, like all institutions of a natural and healthy description, had been a growth from their social life. Nothing in them had found a place there simply from its having commended itself to abstract thought, or from its promising well upon paper. Everything had come with an exigency, and things had been retained purely from their adaptation to exigencies. But to adjust themselves to Milton's republic, the nation needed to forget nearly all the traditions, forms, and feelings of the past, and to substitute an order of things which should be made, in the place of an order of things which had grown. To expect a course of this nature from an intelligent man would be to expect much ; to expect it from a people, and, above all, from a people so attached to their old paths as the English, was to expect unreasonably. As a politician our great bard enunciated many grand truths; but the application of those truths to the actual circumstances of mankind demanded a more flexible habit of thought, and a more flexible temper, than Milton brought to the science of politics. Cromwell knew the majority of the nation to be, in some form or other, Royalists, and that to leave the future of government to the suffrage of the nation would be to vote the destruction of the republic. But Milton beguiled himself with the notion of what the nation might do, or ought to do. Cromwell, from his stronger political insight, saw what the nation would do, if left to itself, and he acted accordingly. Q In regard to religious belief, Milton was in substantial agreement with his age and his country. The home of his youth was of the Puritan type, and his own piety, while it embraced some free elements of its own, as the natural result of his special intelligence and culture, never ceased to be mainly of the Puritan spirit and complexion. At his decease he left two works in manuscript —a Płistory of Muscovy, published soon afterwards; and an elaborate treatise on Christian Doctrine, which remained unknown to the world until published, with a translation from the Latin, in the first quarter of the present century. It is certain, that until nearly forty years of age, Milton was a Trinitarian and a Calvinist. On the doctrine of the Trinity his opinion was to undergo some change; but we have no evidence of that change until the publication of the Faradise Lost, when his age was verging upon sixty. In that poem there were some obscure and unusual expressions concerning the persons commonly regarded as Co-equal and One in the Godhead. But it was left to the publication of the volume on Christian Doctrine to show that the ideas which seemed to be expressed in those passages were the ideas intended. In that work the Son is represented as the highest of created natures, but still as created; and the Holy Spirit, while represented as a person, is supposed to be next in being to the Son. But it should be distinctly remembered, that this conception lvi THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. did not at all affect the opinions of Milton on other points of theology. When this change came all beside remained as it was. He still believed in the Fall of man, and in its consequences in relation to the race; in Redemption by Christ, in pardon through his Atonement, in justification by his Righteous- ness, and in the Regenerating power of the Holy Spirit. Redemption came, in his view, from a trinity of persons, though not of co-equal persons; and from a trinity of offices, though not of offices sustained by persons of the same nature and authority. Milton's critics often express their wonder that so marvellous a drama as Paradise Lost should have been found under the very faint jottings trans- mitted to us in the earlier chapters of Genesis. But the truth is, Milton did not find the materials for his poem within that compass. He believed, as all sound critics believe still, that the earlier portions of Revelation find their true exposition in the later. Paradise Zost is not founded on Genesis: it rests, in common with the theology of the seventeenth century, on the Scriptures as a whole. Until some while after Milton's day, nearly every one who believed in Christianity at all, believed in it very much after his manner. It has been brought as a serious charge against Milton, that in his later years he was not known to be connected with any church, nor as engaging in any form of public worship. But those who prefer this accusation seem to forget that Milton's ecclesiastical quarrel had been with the great Presbyterian party, hardly less than with the Church of England men; that, in his later years, the only church permitted to exist was the Church of England; that to have taken part in any worship not of that church would have been to violate the law, and to have incurred the hazard of fine and imprisonment. It is true, had liberty of worship been granted, Milton would hardly havé found a church with a creed the strict counterpart of his own. But had such liberty been ceded, we have little doubt but occasions would have come in which he would have availed himself of it. Worshippers may be agreed sufficiently to become one in worship without being agreed in everything. Of Dr. Johnson's critique on Milton we have said little. The man who could tell his readers that he judges Milton to have been capable of forging a prayer to be interpolated in the Eikon Basilike, that he might found upon it a malignant charge against the king, has put himself out of court as a witness on any question in which the reputation of the author of Paradise Zost is concerned. Mr. De Quincey, himself a Tory, and far enough removed from Puritanism, has given expression to his judgment and feeling as to the conduct of Johnson towards Milton in words of studied severity, and we can hardly say with more severity than truth. “As regards Dr. Johnson,” he writes, “am I the man that would suffer him to escape under the trivial im- THE LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. lvii. peachment of ‘prejudice P’ Dr. Johnson, viewed in relation to Milton, was a malicious, mendacious, and dishonest man. He was met by temptations many and strong to falsehood, and these temptations he had not the virtue to resist.”" But, in fact, it was not in the nature of Johnson to understand Milton. Johnson found his paradise in the streets of London, and for them could readily dispense with the paradise which Milton had created. With Milton, religion and government were the great interests of humanity. With Johnson, religion was an influence which awed and depressed the soul, in place of filling it with lofty and rapturous aspirations; and as for government, men should be very' thankful for such as George III. was disposed to give them. Human nature, as depicted by Johnson, is a poor nature—poor for this world, poor for the next; as depicted by Milton, its capabilities are divine, and the perfection seen to be possible to it he proclaims as the prophesy of its destiny. The poet may have dwelt so much in the region of the ideal as to have over-rated the actual about him; but the moralist so under-rated the actual as to have been without - power to ascend into the ideal. Johnson could analyse and estimate human beings as developed in city life as no other man could; but human beings rising into fellowship with the angels were far above his sphere. Better, infinitely better, to have been disappointed with Milton, than never to have hoped like Johnson. But why do we speak of disappointment? The fame of the poet is a grand reality; the angel-world into which his spirit has passed is a reality still more grand; and the principles which still come to us front his voice are among the noblest known to human thought, and will last on. —-mº-º-e * Works, vol. x., p. 97. I N T R O D U C T I O N. <> THE general impression concerning Shakespeare is, that he was a man little influenced by the love of fame; and little interested in the struggle relating to civil and religious liberty which was becoming daily stronger in his time, and was soon to bring on a civil war. In these respects Milton was another man. His reverence for humanity in its higher forms, made him desire to have a place in its memory, and in its great heart in the time to come. In this sense he was ambitious, and made no secret of being so; while in regard to freedom generally, such was his estimate of its tendency to develop and ennoble manhood, that to secure its influence to his country, he may be said to have placed his master passion—his love of poetry—in abeyance for half a lifetime, and during that interval, not only to have brought himself to blindness in its cause, but to have exposed himself to the utmost hazard. His convictions, as a Christian and a patriot, were enlightened, serious, and deeply seated. Men of his order must live to great moral and religious ends. Shakespeare, in his vocation, was always a man of comparative purity, more so in his later years; but he could make vice furnish amusement as Milton never could. The forbidden, whether in the shape of levity or malignity, is always presented by our epic poet in its true colours, and never fails of its reward. It is something to be able to say of the greatest of our bards, that he was one of the best of men. The fruits of his genius, accordingly, may well find their home in the purest households. What the genius of Milton was the intelligence of his country has at length fairly recognised. In his day the Bible was regarded as a treasure which had been lost and found. Not more than three generations had passed since it had been rescued from the most guarded secresy, and made to be a home possession with our people. Great was the value attached to it: simple, earnest, and unshaken was the faith reposed in it. Statesmen like Burleigh, soldiers like Raleigh, scholars like Bacon, and patriots like Elliot and Hampden, knelt before this oracle in the spirit of little children. Its utterances were to them unerring, authoritative, final. Milton came in the wake of such men and resembled them. From the Bible his spirit received a divine baptism—a baptism renewed and deepened day by day. His epic, accordingly, is neither lx INTRODUCTION. military nor romantic; it is religious and theological. Such was his age, and such is this great offspring of his genius. - e Satan is not, as some critics allege, the hero of “Paradise Lost.” Nor is that place assigned to Adam : it is given to the Messiah. It must be confessed, however, that to have made the symmetry of the inspiration complete, the “Paradise Regained " should have been wrought in with the “Paradise Lost.” We might have dispensed with much in the closing portions of the latter poem to have made room for such a sequel. The “Paradise Lost" presents the epic elements of conflict, suffering, and retribution; but the actor designed especially to embody the ideas of suffering and triumph, does not take an adequate part in the scenes which pass before us. We need to follow him from the first poem to the second to see him hold his due place in the great scheme of events. - & Great were the difficulties to be surmounted in the treatment of such a theme. Homer and Virgil blend the natural and the supernatural; but the gods and goddesses at their disposal were so humanised already in the imagination of their contemporaries, as to be little other than men and women. But it was not so with Milton. The angel forms in Scripture, indeed, are human; but they are still ethereal. They soar into the air, they pass through fire, they penetrate dungeons, and are impervious to matter. Their homes, too, like themselves, must be impalpable to sense. How, then, describe the one or the other? As the Bible gave the poet his subject, so it gave him his manner of dealing with it. His angels take the human form—that form as we may imagine it in heaven or hell. His heaven gives us the earth again, but the earth rising to a loftier grandeur, and clothed in a more lustrous, manifold, and mysterious beauty. His hell brings together the dark and terrible shadows sometimes present to us in this material world—the darkness becoming still more dark, the terror still more terrific. Every vision and hint in the Scriptures on these subjects, is treasured and pondered, until it becomes suggestive, expands, and suffices as an outline to be filled up by the imagination. And wonderful is the creative power which fills up those voids. Those whom Milton has led into his paradise never forget that they have been there; those who have ascended with him into his regions of light never cease to be conscious of the sights which have there fascinated them; and those who have stood in the midst of his “darkness visible," and gazed on what was to be seen in that land where “the light is as darkness," have passed through experiences which have become a part of their being. It is common to speak of the sublimity of Milton as the highest attribute of his genius; but only the inspiration which stretched out the light and darkness of his upper and nether worlds, could have made us dream of the beauties of his Paradise as we now do. INTRODUCTION. lxi Shakespeare transcends all other writers in the apparent ease with which his ideas seem to find birth and expression; and in the variety of characters which he places, as with the touch of an enchanter, upon his canvas. In what Milton does there is generally a perceptible effort. But some appearances of this nature were inseparable from a subject so lofty in its aim, and to the successful presentation of which a sustained elevation of an extraordinary description was indispensable. It is true Milton does sometimes tell you by his manner that he means to say great and eloquent things. But then he does not disappoint you—the things are said. Only a mind thus self-conscious could have achieved such success in relation to such a subject. With regard to variety of character, it becomes us to inquire what the variety proper to such a history really is, and then to ask whether the writer has realised, in this respect, the thing to have been expected from him. “Paradise Lost" was not a stage on which to exhibit the ways of clowns and court fools: it has to do with beings who are in earnest, and awful in their goodness or in their ruin. Any attempt to admix the grave and the gay in such a narrative would have been monstrous. It would be easy to show that nothing could be more true to nature than the distinct traits with which the poet has adorned the manhood and womanhood of our first parents; and that among the good in heaven, and the bad in hell, the shades of difference in character are often well presented. Abdiel is not a duplicate of Gabriel, nor is Michael of Raphael; and wide is the space which separates between Moloch and Belial, Mammon and Beelzebub. These all have their own utterances; and Satan, by his higher intelligence, his pride of heart and strength of will, has his place apart from and above them all. So wonderful is he, that he throws a spell over the reader through the early stages of this poem. But it is soon , broken. As the drama develops itself, the feeling of interest in his fate gives place to a feeling of aversion and execration. It may seem strange that a being so often baffled, humbled, prostrated, should persist in his course, and seem to be hopeful. But we know not the space allowed to the power of self- illusion in the case of such natures; and we know enough of moral agents, in this world, to be aware that when “a deceived heart has turned them aside,” to be doomed to “feed on ashes” is not to be reclaimed. The power to say, “Is there not a lie in my right hand?” seems to pass from them." It should be remembered, too, that Satanic agency is far from being wholly a failure. To an intelligence which moral evil has disturbed, nothing would be more natural than the persuasion, that the resistance which the Great Ruler does not at once suppress, is resistance beyond his power. * Isa. xliv. 20. lxii - INTRODUCTION. It is proper to say to the uninitiated reader, that he will find some of the later portions even of this poem descend to the didactic, and become com- paratively prosaic. Some things in it, also, are open, we think, to critical exception. The introduction of the Divine persons in direct dialogue before the reader, will be generally felt as an instance of this nature. The same may be said, perhaps, of the allegorical beings, Sin and Death, though from the revival of letters poets had been fond of such representations. To know what these appearances denote, is to fail to realise them as objects of the imagination. But Satan is a reality; and nearly everything beside in this sublime drama, gives us this impression. In mentioning these particulars, we merely say that the work is not—as no purely human work can be—wholly without fault. The general splendour so obscures these faint blemishes, that in thinking of Milton we hardly remember them. Milton's blindness when the greater part of his poetry was written and published, must have been very unfavourable to strict accuracy. Errors may be traced in his historical, and even in his classical allusions, which we feel sure would not have had any place in his writings had he not been so much shut off from books, and dependent on memory. There are passages, too, in which words seem to have been misunderstood by his amanuensis, or by the printer. No one now thinks of retaining his profuse employment of capital letters or his orthography, while in regard to punctuation, he must have been especially dependent upon others. In this last respect, more effort has been made than will be generally understood, in the hope of rendering this Edition such as the poet must have desired. P A R A D ISE LOST. * §º > <> E *Q BOOK I. THE First Book proposes, first in brief, the whole subject, man's disobedience, and the loss thereupon of Paradise, wherein he was placed ; then touches the prime cause of his fall, the Serpent, or rather Satan in the Serpent; who, revolting from God, and drawing to his side many legions of angels, was, by the command of God, driven out of Heaven, with all his crew, into the great deep. Which action passed over, the Poem hastens into the midst of things, presenting Satan with his angels now falling into Hell, described here, not in the centre,for Heaven and Earth may be supposed as yet not made, :ertainly not yet accursed, but in a place of utter darkness, fitliest called Chaos. Here Satan, with his angels, lying on the burning lake, thunderstruck and astonished, after a certain space recovers, as from confusion, calls up him who next in order and dignity lay by him; they confer of their miserable fall; Satan awakens all his legions, who lay till then in the same manner confounded. They rise; their numbers; array of battle; their chief leaders named, according to the idols known afterward in Canaan and the countries adjoining. To these Satan directs his speech, comforts them with hope yet of regaining Heaven, but tells them lastly of a new world, and a new kind of creature to be created, according to an ancient prophecy, or report in Heaven; for, that angels were long before this visible creation, was the opinion of many ancient fathers. To find out the truth of this prophecy, and what to determine thereon, he refers to a full council. What his associates thence attempt. Pandemonium, the palace of Satan, rises, suddenly built out of the deep : the infernal peers there sit in council. 3. F man's first disobedience, and the fruit' Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste Brought death into the world, and all our woe, With loss of Eden, till one greater Man Restore us, and regain the blissful seat, Sing, heavenly Muse,” that on the secret top Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire - That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed In the beginning how the heavens and earth Few things are so fatal to the pleasant and profitable reading of an author, as the distraction occasioned by profuse, and often trivial, notes upon his text. Commentators on Milton have assigned a large space to coincidences between him and preceding writers—a wonderfully larger space than we should have thought it worth while so to occupy. We doubt not that much the greater part of those coincidences are coincidences of which the author was wholly unconscious; and where it was otherwise, the matter is either so trivial as not to deserve to be mentioned, or the metal borrowed is borrowed almost invariably that it might receive an impress which the genius of Milton only could have given to it. In the annotation we submit to the reader, we hope to distinguish between what may be really useful, and what would be felt as only so much incumbrance and impediment. - tº * Sing, heavenly Muse.—Prayer for the inspiration breathed into the old Hebrew prophets. Milton's third wife, who survived him many years, related of him that he used to compose his poetry chiefly in winter; and on his waking in a morning would make her write down sometimes twenty or thirty verses. Being asked whether he did not often read Homer and Virgil, she understood the question as indicating a suspicion that he may have made an undue use in some instances of those authors, and answered with eagerness—“He stole from nobody but the Muse who inspired him;” and being asked by a lady present who the Muse was, she replied—“It was God's grace, and the Holy Spirit that visited him nightly.”—Vewton's Life of Milton. Richardson also says—“Milton would sometimes lie awake whole nights, but not a verse could he make ; and on a sudden his poetic fancy would rush upon him with an impetus or astrum.” R º 2 - - PARADISE LOST ſBOOK I.—wo-4o. Rose out of Chaos: or, if Sion hill Delight thee more, and Siloa's brook that flowed Fast by the orade of God, I thence . Invoke thy aid to my adventurous song, That, with no middle flight, intends to soar Above the Aonian mount," while it pursues Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme. And chiefly Thou, O Spirit,” that dost prefer Before all temples the upright heart and pure, Instruct me, for Thou know'st: Thou from the first Wast present, and with mighty wings outspread, Dove-like, sat'st brooding on the vast abyss, And madest it pregnant. What in me is dark, Illumine; what is low, raise and support ; That to the height of this great argument I may assert Eternal Providence, And justify the ways of God to men. Say first—for Heaven hides nothing from thy view, Nor the deep tract of Hell—say first, what cause Moved our grand parents, in that happy state, Favoured of Heaven so highly, to fall off From their Creator, and transgress His will For one restraint, lords of the world besides 2 Who first seduced them to that foul revolt 2 The infernal Serpent ; he it was, whose guile, Stirred up with envy and revenge, deceived The mother of mankind; what time his pride Had cast him out from Heaven, with all his host Of rebel Angels; by whose aid, aspiring To set himself in glory above his peers, He trusted to have equalled the Most High, * Above the Aonian mount.—Mount Helicon, the seat of the Greek Muses. The poet aims at higher things than could have come from their inspiration. . * And chiefty Thou, O Spirit.—It is thus that Milton seeks, not only the inspiration which has given us Hebrew poetry, but that which has given us Hebrew sanctity. * Grand parents.-First, or great parents. se ! ¿ · …% |-|- <!-- ( ) Aook I., lines 44, 45. Him the Almighty Power Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky. book I–41-72.] - PARADISE LOST. If he opposed ; and, with ambitious aim, Against the throne and monarchy of God, Raised impious war in Heaven, and battle proud. With vain attempt. Him the Almighty Power Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky, With hideous ruin and combustion,' down To bottomless perdition ; there to dwell * In adamantine chains and pénal fire, Who durst defy the Omnipotent to arms. Nine times the space that measures day and night To mortal men, he with his horrid CreW Lay vanquished, rolling in the fiery gulf, Confounded, though immortal. But his doom Reserved him to more wrath; for now the thought Both of lost happiness and lasting pain Torments him. Round he throws his baleful eyes, That witnessed’ huge affliction and dismay, Mixed with obdurate pride and steadfast hate. At once, as far as angels' ken, he views The dismal situation waste and wild. A dungeon horrible, on all sides round, As one great furnace, flamed. Yet from those flames No light, but rather darkness visible Served only to discover sights of woe, Regions of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace And rest can never dwell, hope In eVer COIneS That comes to all; but torture without end Still urges, and a fiery deluge, fed , , With ever-burning sulphur unconsumed. Such place eternal justice had prepared For those rebellious; here their prison ordained In utter darkness, and their portion set • Combasstion.—Crushed and scattered by elemental forces * That witnessed.—Expressed—showed. 4. * PARADISE LOST. { } [look I.-73-103 As far removed from God and light of heaven, As from the centre thrice to the utmost pole. Oh, how unlike the place from whence they fell ! There the companions of his fall, o'erwhelmed With floods and whirlwinds of tempestuous fire, He soon discerns; and weltering by his side One next himself in power, and next in crime, Long after known in Palestine, and named Beelzebub : to whom the arch-enemy, And thence in Heaven called Satan, with bold words Breaking the horrid silence, thus began : . If thou beest he ; but oh, how fallen how changed From him, who, in the happy realms of light, Clothed with transcendent brightness, didst outshine * — Myriads, though bright ! If he, whom mutual league, United thoughts and counsels, equal hope - And hazard in the glorious enterprise, Joined with me once, now misery hath joined In equal ruin; into what pit thou seest From what height fallen, so much the stronger proved He with his thunder. And till then who knew The force of those dire arms ? Yet not for those, Nor what the potent Victor in his rage Can else inflict, do I repent or change, Though changed in outward lustre, that fixed mind, And high disdain from sense of injured merit, That with the Mightiest raised me to contend, And to the fierce contention brought along Innumerable force of Spirits armed, That durst dislike his reign, and, me preferring, His utmost power with adverse power opposed Zong after known in Palestine.—Milton often speaks of the heathen gods as being the ſallen angels, practising their frauds in that form upon their victims. * Satan.—Enemy, in Hebrew. nook I.-Ioa-137.]" PARADISE LOST. In dubious battle on the plains of Heaven, And shook his throne. What though the field be lost? All is not lost; the unconquerable will, And study of revenge, immortal hate, And courage never to submit or yield, And what is else not to be overcome ; That glory never shall his wrath or might Extort from me. To bow and sue for grace With suppliant knee, and deify His power Who from the terror of this arm so late Doubted his empire—that were low indeed, That were an ignominy, and shame beneath This downfall. Since, by fate, the strength of gods, And this empyreal substance, cannot fail; - Since, through experience of this great event, In arms not worse, in foresight much advanced, We may with more successful hope resolve To wage, by force or guile, eternal war, Irreconcilable to our grand Foe, Who now triumphs, and, in the excess of joy Sole reigning, holds.the tyranny of Heaven. So spake the apostate angel, though in pain, Vaunting aloud, but racked with deep despair; And him thus answered soon his bold compeer : O prince, O chief of many-throned powers, That led the embattled seraphim to war Under thy conduct, and, in dreadful deeds Fearless, endanger'd heaven's perpetual King, And put to proof His high supremacy, Whether upheld by strength, or chance, or fate; Too well I see and rue the dire event, That with sad overthrow and foul defeat, Hath lost us Heaven, and all this mighty host In horrible destruction laid thus low, PARADISE LOST. [Book 1–138-169. As far as gods and heavenly essences Can perish : for the mind and spirit remain Invincible, and vigour soon returns, Though all our glory extinct, and happy state Here swallowed up in endless misery. But what if He our Conqueror—whom I now Of force believe Almighty—since no less Than such could have o'erpowered such force as ours— Have left us this our spirit and strength entire, Strongly to suffer and support our pains, That we may so suffice' His vengeful ire, Or do Him mightier service as His thralls By right of war, whate'er His business be, Here in the heart of hell to work in fire, Or to His errands in the gloomy Deep 2 What can it then avail, though yet we feel Strength undiminished, or eternal being, To undergo eternal punishment? Whereto with speedy words the arch-fiend replied: Fallen cherub to be weak is miserable. Doing or suffering : but of this be sure, To do aught good never will be our task, But ever to do ill our sole delight, As being the contrary to His high will Whom we resist. If then His providence Out of our evil seek to bring forth good, Our labour must be to pervert that end, And out of good still to find means of evil; Which oft-times may succeed, so as perhaps Shall grieve Him, if I fail not, and disturb His inmost counsels from their destined aim. But see the angry Victor hath recalled * Suffice.—Satisfy. * Thralls.--Anglo-Saxon for slaves. Hence our word thraldo... Book 1,-70-199.] - PARADISE LOST. 7 His ministers of vengeance and pursuit Back to the gates of Heaven. The sulphurous hail. Shot after us in storm, o'erblown, hath laid The fiery surge, that from the precipice Of Heaven received us falling, and the thunder, Winged with red lightning and impetuous rage, Perhaps hath spent his shafts, and ceases now To below through the vast and boundless Deep. Let us not slip the occasion, whether scorn, Or satiate fury, yield it from our Foe. Seest thou the dreary plain, forlorn and wild, The seat of desolation, void of light, Save what the glimmering of these livid flames Cast pale and dreadful ? Thither let us tend From of the tossing of these fiery waves, There rest—if any rest can harbour there— •And, re-assembling our afflicted powers, Consult how we may henceforth most offend Our Enemy, our own loss how repair, How overcome this dire calamity, What reinforcement we may gain from hope, If not, what resolution from despair. Thus Satan, talking to his nearest mate, With head uplift above the wave, and eyes That sparkling blazed, his other parts besides Prone on the flood, extended long and large, Lay floating many a rood, in bulk as huge As whom' the fables name of monstrous size, Titanian, or Earth-born, that warred on Jove; Briareus,” or Typhon," whom the den * As whom.—As his whom. * Titanian.—The Titans, or giants, wino according to the Greek mythology, made war upon the gods. * Briareus.-One of three monster brothers, described as possessing a hundred arms and fifty heads. They are said to have given victory to the gods over the Titans. * Typhon.—A tempest-producing, and sometimes a fire-breathing giant. Hesiod makes Typhaon and Typhoeus two distinct monster powers of the primitive world. - PARADISE LOST. |BOOK I.—zoo-232. By ancient Tarsus held ; or that sea-beast Leviathan, which God of all His works Created hugest that swim the ocean stream: Him, haply, slumbering on the Norway foam, The pilot of some small night-foundered skiff, Deeming some island, oft, as seamen tell, With fixed anchor in his scaly rind, – Moors by his side under the lea, while night Invests the sea, and wished morn delays — So stretched out huge in length the Arch-fiend lay Chained on the burning lake, nor ever thence Had risen, or heaved his head, but that the will And high permission of all-ruling Heaven Left him at large to his own dark designs, That with reiterated crimes he might Heap on himself damnation, while he sought Evil to others; and, enraged, might see How all his malice served but to bring forth Infinite goodness, grace, and mercy, shown On man by him seduced ; but on himself Treble confusion, wrath, and vengeance, poured. Forthwith upright he rears from off the pool His mighty stature. On each hand the flames, Driven backward, slope their pointing spires, and, rolled In billows, leave in the midst a horrid vale. * Then with expanded wings he steers his flight Aloft, incumbent on the dusky air, . That felt unusual weight, till on dry land He lights—if it were land that ever burned With solid, as the lake with liquid, fire: And such appeared in hue as when the force Of subterranean wind transports a hill Torn from Pelorus,' or the shattered side * Pelorus.-The northern cape of Sicilv. --------- Forthwith upright he rears from off the pool A. 8. His mighty stature. Book /, lines 221, 222. Book I–233-263.] PARADISE LOST. Of thundering AEtna, whose combustible And fuelled entrails thence conceiving fire, Sublimed with mineral fury, aid the winds And leave a singed bottom, all involved' With stench and smoke. Such resting found the sole Of unblessed feet. Him followed his next mate: Both glorying to have 'scaped the Stygian” flood As gods, and by their own recovered strength, Not by the sufferance of supernal Power. - Is this the region, this the soil, the clime, - Said then the lost archangel, this the seat That we must change for Heaven; this mournful gloom For that celestial light 2 Be it so | Since He, Who now is Sovran, can dispose and bid What shall be right: furthest from Him is best, Whom reason hath equalled, force hath made supreme Above His equals. Farewell, happy fields, Where joy for ever dwells Hail, horrors hail, Infernal world ! And thou, profoundest Hell, Receive thy new possessor One who brings A mind not to be changed by place or time. The mind is its own place, and in itself Can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven. What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than He Whom thunder hath made greater 2 Here at least We shall be free; the Almighty hath not built Here for His envy; will not drive us hence. . Here we may reign secure, and, in my choice,” To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell. Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven. * All involved.—Involved in, or along with. . © - * Stygian.—From Styx—the name of the great river which is said to flow round the nether world seven times. * In my choice.—In my judgment—to me. g C [C, PARADISE LOST. - [Book I.-264-294 But wherefore let we then our faithful friends, The associates and copartners of our loss, Lie thus astonished on the oblivious pool, And call them not to share with us their part In this unhappy mansion; or once more With rallied arms to try what may be yet Regained in Heaven, or what more lost in Hell ? So Satan spake; and him Beelzebub Thus answered: Leader of those armies bright, Which but the Omnipotent none could have foiled ! If once they hear that voice, their liveliest pledge Of hope in fears and dangers, heard so oft In worse extremes, and on the perilous edge, Of battle, when it raged, in all assaults Their surest signals, they will soon resume New courage and revive, though now they lie Grovelling and prostrate on yon lake of fire, As we erewhile, astounded and amazed. No wonder, fallen such a pernicious height. He scarce had ceased, when the superior fiend Was moving towards the shore, his ponderous shield, Ethereal temper, massy, large, and round, Behind him cast. The broad circumference Hung on his shoulders like the moon, whose orb Through optic glass the Tuscan artist' views At evening from the top of Fesole” Or in Valdarno,” to descry new lands, Rivers, or mountains, in her spotty globe. His spear, to equal which the tallest pine, Hewn on Norwegian hills, to be the mast On some great ammiral," were but a wand * The Tuscan artist.—Galileo, the inventor of the telescope. * Fesole.—A hill overlooking Florence and the surrounding country. * Waldarno.—The seat of Florence. * Ammiral.—An Italian form of expression for admiral. The admiral's ship was often called the admiral, Book I.-295-325.] - PARADISE LOST. - ‘I I / He walked with to support uneasy steps Over the burning marl, not like those steps On Heaven's azure, and the torrid clime . Smote on him sore besides, vaulted with fire. Nathless he so endured, till on the beach Of that inflamed sea he stood, and called His legions, angel forms, who lay entranced' Thick as autumnal leaves that strew the brooks In Vallambrosa,” where the Etrurian shades High overarched embower, or scattered sedge Afloat, when with fierce winds Orion armed Hath vexed the Red Sea coast, whose waves o'erthrew Busiris' and his Memphian chivalry," - While with perfidious hatred they pursued The sojourners of Goshen, who beheld From the safe shore their floating carcases And broken chariot-wheels: so thick bestrewn, Abject and lost lay these, covering the flood, Under amazement of their hideous change. He called so loud, that all the hollow deep Of Hell resounded : Princes, potentates, Warriors, the flower of Heaven, once yours, now lost, If such astonishment as this can seize - Eternal spirits. Or have ye chosen this place After the toil of battle to repose Your wearied virtue, for the ease you find To slumber here, as in the vales of Heaven 2 Or in this abject posture have ye sworn To adore the Conqueror —who now beholds Cherub and seraph rolling in the flood, With scattered arms and ensigns; till anon ! Entranced.—Bereſt of mental power—incapable of action. * Vallambrosa.-A wooded district about eighteen miles from Florence. * Busiris.-Name given to the Pharaohs of the Red Sea. • Memphian chivalry.—The horsemen and charioteers who followed the Israelites. I 2 PARADISE LOST. - . . [Book 1–326-357 His swift pursuers from Heaven-gates discern The advantage, and descending, tread us down Thus drooping, or with linked thunderbolts Transfix us to the bottom of this gulf? Awake, arise, or be for ever fallen They heard, and were abashed, and up they sprung Upon the wing—as when men, wont to watch On duty, sleeping found by whom they dread, Rouse and bestir themselves ere well awake. Nor did they not perceive the evil plight In which they were, or the fierce pains not feel. Yet to their general's voice they soon obeyed Innumerable. As when the potent rod Of Amram's son,’ in Egypt's evil day, Waved round the coast, up called a pitchy cloud Of locusts, warping on the eastern wind That o'er the realm of impious Pharaoh hung Like night, and darkened all the land of Nile: So numberless were those bad Angels seen, Hovering on wing, under the cope of Hell, "Twixt upper, nether, and surrounding fires,- Till, at a signal given, the uplifted spear Of their great sultan waving to direct Their course, in even balance down they light On the firm brimstone, and fill all the plain, A multitude, like which the populous North Poured never from her frozen loins, to pass Rhene or the Danaw,” when her barbarous sons Came like a deluge on the south, and spread Beneath Gibraltar to the Libyan sands. Forthwith from every squadron and each band, . The heads and leaders thither haste where stood " Amram's son.—Moses. * Rhene or the Danaw.—The Rhine or Danube. * - ==== == − ã => - 3. | % º | º They heard, and were abashed, and up they sprung. Æook /., Zine 331 // |- | So numberless were those bad Angels seen, Hovering on wing, under the cope of Hell. Aook /., lines 344, 345. Book 1.-358-391.] PARADISE LOST. . I 3 Their great commander. Godlike shapes, and forms Excelling human ; princely dignities; And powers that erst in Heaven sat on thrones, Though of their names in heavenly records now Be no memorial, blótted out and rased By their rebellion from the Book of Life. Nor had they yet among the sons of Eve Got them new names; till, wandering o'er the earth, Through God's high sufferance, for the trial of man, By falsities and lies the greatest part - Of mankind they corrupted to forsake God their Creator, and the invisible Glory of Him that made them to transform Oft to the image of a brute, adorned With gay religions, full of pomp and gold, And devils to adore for deities: - Then were they known to men by various names, And various idols through the heathen world. Say, Muse, their names then known. Who first, who last, Roused from the slumber, on that fiery couch, - At their great emperor's call, as next in worth Came singly where he stood on the bare strand, While the promiscuous crowd stood yet aloof. The chief were those, who, from the pit of Hell, Roaming to seek their prey on earth, durst fix Their seats long after next the seat of God, Their altars by His altar; gods adored Among the nations round; and durst abide Jehovah thundering out of Sion, throned Between the cherubim ; yea, often placed Within His sanctuary itself their shrines, Abominations, and with cursed things His holy rites and solemn feasts profaned, And with their darkness durst affront His light. 14 PARADISE LOST. [Book I.-392–421. First, Moloch, horrid king, besmeared with blood Of human sacrifice, and parents' tears; Though, for the noise of drums and timbrels loud, Their children's cries unheard, that passed through fire To his grim idol. Him the Ammonite Worshipped in Rabba' and her watery plain, In Argob and in Basan, to the stream Of utmost Arnon. Nor content with such Audacious neighbourhood, the wisest heart Of Solomon he led by fraud to build His temple right against the temple of God, On that opprobrious hill,” and made his grove The pleasant valley of Hinnom, Tophet thence And black Gehenna called, the type of Hell.” Next, Chemos, the obscene dread of Moab's sons, From Aroer to Nebo, and the wild Of southmost Abarim ; in Hesebon, And Horonáim, Seon's realm, beyond The flowery dale of Sibma, clad with vines, And Eleålé to the asphaltic pool." Peor his other name, when he enticed Israel in Sittim, on their march from Nile, To do him wanton rites, which cost them woe. Yet thence his lustful orgies he enlarged Even to that hill of scandal, by the grove Of Moloch homicide; lust hard by hate; Till good Josiah drove them hence to Hell. With these came they, who, from the bordering flood Of old Euphrates to the brook that parts Egypt from Syrian ground, had general names * In Rabba-Capital of the Ammonites. * That opprobrious hill.—Made opprobrious by the uses to which it was thus applied. * Type of Hell.—Tophet was originally a beautiful royal residence in the Valley of Hinnom ; but from the abominations which came to be practised there, the later Jews were wont to burn the bodies of malefactors in that quarter, and took from it their “type of hell.” * Asphaltic pcol.—The IJead Sea. BOOK I.—422–452.J & PARADISE LOST. I 5 - Of Baalim and Ashtaroth; those male, These feminine; for spirits, when they please, Can either sex assume, or both, so soft And uncompounded is their essence pure, Not tied or manacled with joint or limb, Nor founded on the brittle strength of bones, Like Cumbrous flesh, but, in what shape they choose, Dilated or condensed, bright or obscure, e Can execute their aery purposes, And works of love or enmity fulfil. For those the race of Israel oft forsook Their Living Strength, and unfrequented leſt His righteous altar, bowing lowly down To bestial gods; for which their heads as low Bowed down in battle, sunk before the spear Of despicable foes. With these in troop Came Astoreth, whom the Phoenicians called Astarte, queen of heaven, with crescent horns, To whose bright image nightly by the moon Sidonian virgins paid their vows and songs; In Sion also not unsung, where stood Her temple on the offensive mountain, built By that uxorious king, whose heart, though large, Beguiled by fair idolatresses, fell To idols foul. Thammuz came next behind, Whose annual wound, to Lebanon allured The Syrian damsels to lament his fate In amorous ditties all a summer's day, While smooth Adonis from his native rock Ran purple to the sea, supposed with blood Of Thammuz' yearly wounded : the love-tale * Thammus.--A god of the Syrians—the Adonis of that people—said to die every year and to live again. Women professed yearly to lament his fate, and great sensual vice, as the mode of doing him homage, was the result. (See Ezek. viii. 13, 14.) 16 PARADISE LOST. - [BOOK I.—453-485 Infected Sion's daughters with like heat, Whose wanton passions in the sacred porch Ezekiel saw, when, by the vision led, His eye surveyed the dark idolatries Of alienated Judah." Next came one Who mourned in earnest, when the captive ark Maimed his brute image, heads and hands lopped off In his own temple, on the grunsel edge, Where he fell flat, and shamed his worshippers. Dagon his name, sea-monster, upward man And downward fish : yet had his temple high Reared in Azotus, dreaded through the coast Of Palestine, in Gath and Ascalon, - And Accaron and Gaza's frontier bounds. Him followed Rimmon, whose delightful seat Was fair Damascus, on the fertile banks Of Abbana and Pharphar, lucid streams. He also gainst the house of God was bold: A leper once he lost, and gained a king ; Ahaz, his sottish conqueror, whom he drew God's altar to disparage and displace, For one of Syrian mode, whereon to burn His odious offerings, and adore the gods Whom he had vanquished. After these appeared A crew, who, under names of old renown, Osiris, Isis, Orus, and their train, - With monstrous shapes and sorceries abused Fanatic Egypt, and her priests, to seek Their wandering gods disguised in brutish forms Rather than human. Nor did Israel 'scape The infection, when their borrowed gold composed The calf in Oreb; and the rebel king Doubled that sin in Bethel and in Dan, * Ezek. viii. 12. * Grunsel edge—Threshold -look 1.-486-518.] PARADISE LOST. * I 7 Likening his Maker to the grazed ox, Jehovah, who, in one night, when He passed From Egypt marching, equalled with one stroke Both her first-born and all her bleating gods. Belial came last, than whom a spirit more lewd Fell not from heaven, or more gross to love Vice for itself: to him no temple stood, Or altar smoked : yet who more oft than he In temples and at altars, when the priest Turns atheist, as did Eli's sons, who filled With lust and violence the house of God 2 In courts and palaces he also reigns, And in luxurious cities, where the noise Of riot ascends above their loftiest towers, And injury, and outrage; and when night Darkens the streets, then wander forth the sons Of Belial, flown with insolence and wine. Witness the streets of Sodom, and that night In Gibeah, when the hospitable door Exposed a matron, to avoid worse rape. These were the prime in order and in might : The rest were long to tell, though far renowned, The Ionian gods, of Javan's issue held Gods, yet confessed later than heaven and earth, Their boasted parents: Titan, heaven's first-born, With his enormous brood, and birthright seized By younger Saturn ; he from mightier Jove, His own and Rhea's son, like measure found. So Jove usurping reigned. These first in Crete And Ida known, thence on the snowy top Of cold Olympus ruled the middle air, Their highest heaven; or on the Delphian cliff. Or in Dodona,' and through all the bounds The Delphian cliff, or in Dodona.-There was an oracle to Apollo at Delphi, and one to Jupiter at Dodona. D 18 PARADISE LOST. [Book I.-519–550. Of Doric land ; or who with Saturn old Fled over Adria to the Hesperian fields, And o'er the Celtic roamed the utmost isles. All these and more came flocking; but with looks Downcast and damp ; yet such wherein appeared . Obscure some glimpse of joy, to have found their chief Not in despair, to have found themselves not lost In loss itself—which on his countenance cast Like doubtful hue. But he, his wonted pride Soon recollecting, with high words, that bore Semblance of worth, not substance, gently raised Their fainting courage, and dispelled their fears. Then straight commands, that at the warlike sound Of trumpets loud and clarions, be upreared His mighty standard. That proud honour claim'd Azazel as his right; a cherub tall, Who forthwith from the glittering staff unfurled The imperial ensign, which, full high advanced, Shone like a meteor streaming to the wind, With gems and golden lustre rich emblazed, Seraphic arms and trophies; all the while Sonorous metal blowing martial sounds, At which the universal host up sent A shout, that tore Hell's concave, and beyond Frighted the reign of Chaos and old. Night. All in a moment, through the gloom were seen Ten thousand banners rise into the air, With orient colours waving. With them rose A forest huge of spears; and thronging helms Appeared, and serried shields in thick array, Of death immeasurable: anon they move In perfect phalanx to the Dorian mood' * The Dorian mood.—In the Greek or Spartan manner. Book I.—551–581.] PARADISE LOST. 19 Of flutes and soft recorders, such as raised To height of noblest temper heroes old Arming to battle; and instead of rage Deliberate valour breathed, firm and unmoved With dread of death to flight or foul retreat: Nor wanting power to mitigate and 'suage With solemn touches troubled thoughts, and chase Anguish, and doubt, and fear, and sorrow, and pain, From mortal or immortal minds. Thus they, Breathing united force, with fixed thought, Moved on in silence to soft pipes, that charmed Their painful steps o'er the burnt soil. And now Advanced in view they stand, a horrid front Of dreadful length and dazzling arms, in guise Of warriors old with ordered spear and shield, Awaiting what command their mighty chief Had to impose. He through the armed files Darts his experienced eye, and soon traverse' The whole battalion views, their order due, Their visages and stature as of gods, Their number last he sums. And now his heart Distends with pride, and hardening in his strength Glories. For never, since created man, Met such embodied force, as named with these Could merit more than that small infantry Warred on by cranes, though all the giant brood Of Phlegra” with the heroic race were joined That fought at Thebes and Ilium,” on each side Mixed with auxiliar gods; and what resounds In fable or romance of Uther's son Begirt with British and Armoric knights; * Traverse.—From end to end. * of Phlegra-Some make the giant war in which Hercules was engaged to have taken place in Phlegra. * Thebes and Ilium.—The Greek Thebes and Troy. 2O . PARADISE LOST. (BOOK I.—582–615. And all who since, baptized or infidel, Jousted in Aspramont, or Montalban, Damasco, or Morocco, or Trebisond, Or whom Biserta sent from Afric show, When Charlemain with all his peerage fell By Fontarabia. Thus far these beyond Compare of mortal prowess, yet observed Their dread commander. He, above the rest In shape and gesture proudly eminent, Stood like a tower. His form had yet not lost All its original brightness ; nor appeared Less than Archangel ruined, and the excess Of glory obscured,—as when the sun, new risen, Looks through the horizontal misty air, - Shorn of his beams; or from behind the moon, In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight sheds On half the nations, and with fear of change Perplexes monarchs. Darkened so, yet shone Above them all the Archangel. But his face Deep scars of thunder had intrenched, and care Sat on his faded cheek, but under brows Of dauntless courage, and considerate pride Waiting revenge. Cruel his eye, but cast Signs of remorse and passion, to behold The fellows of his crime, the followers rather— Far other once beheld in bliss—condemned For ever now to have their lot in pain, Millions of spirits for his fault amerced Of Heaven, and from eternal splendours flung For his revolt, yet faithful how they stood, Their glory withered: as when heaven's fire Hath scathed the forest oaks, or mountain pines, With singed top, their stately growth, though bare, Stands on the blasted heath. He now prepared Book I.—616–649.]. PARADISE LOST. - * 2 ) To speak; whereat their doubled ranks they bend From wing to wing, and half enclose him round With all his peers: attention held them mute. Thrice he essayed, and thrice, in spite of scorn, Tears, such as angels weep, burst forth : at last Words, interwove with sighs, found out their way. O myriads of immortal spirits O powers Matchless, but with the Almighty and that strife Was not inglorious, though the event was dire, As this place testifies, and this dire change, - Hateful to utter | But what power of mind, Foreseeing or presaging, from the depth Of knowledge past or present, could have feared, How such united force of gods, how such As stood like these, could ever know repulse? For who can yet believe, though after loss, That all these puissant legions, whose exile Hath emptied heaven, shall fail to re-ascend Self-raised, and re-possess their native seat? For me, be witness all the host of heaven, If counsels different, or dangers shunned By me, have lost our hopes. But He who reigns Monarch in heaven, till then as one secure Sat on His throne, upheld by old repute, Consent or custom, and His regal state Put forth at full, but still His strength concealed, Which tempted our attempt, and wrought our fall. - Henceforth His might we know, and know our own ; So as not either to provoke, or dread - New war provoked. Our better part remains To work in close design, by fraud or guile, What force effected not, that He no less At length from us may find, who overcomes By force, hath overcome but half his foe. PARADISE LOST. [Book I.-650–683. Space may produce new worlds; whereof so rife There went a fame in heaven that he ere long Intended to create, and therein plant A generation whom his choice regard Should favour equal to the sons of heaven. Thither, if but to pry, should be perhaps Our first eruption. Thither or elsewhere, For this infernal pit shall never hold Celestial spirits in bondage, nor the abyss Long under darkness cover. But these thoughts Full counsel must mature. Peace is despaired ; For who can think submission ? War then, war, Open or understood, must be resolved. He spake: and to confirm his words, out flew Millions of flaming swords, drawn from the thighs Of mighty cherubim; the sudden blaze Far round illumined Hell. Highly they raged Against the Highest, and fierce with grasped arms Clashed on their sounding shields the din of war, Hurling defiance toward the vault of Heaven. There stood a hill not far, whose grisly top Belched fire and rolling smoke; the rest entire Shone with a glossy scurf; undoubted sign That in his womb was hid metallic ore, The work of sulphur. Thither, winged with speed, A numerous brigade hastened : as when bands Of pioneers, with spade and pickaxe arm’d, Forerun the royal camp, to trench a field, Or cast a rampart. Mammon led them on, Mammon, the least erected spirit that fell From heaven,_for een in heaven his looks and thoughts Were always downward bent, admiring more The riches of heaven's pavement, trodden gold, Than aught divine or holy, else enjoyed Book I–684–717.] PARADISE LOST. 23 In vision beatific. By him first - Men also, and by his suggestion taught, Ransacked the centre, and with impious hands Rifled the bowels, of their mother earth For treasures, better hid. Soon had his crew Opened into the hill a spacious wound, And digged out ribs of gold. Let none admire That riches grow in Hell,—that soil may best Deserve the precious bane. And here let those Who boast in mortal things, and wondering tell Of Babel, and the works of Memphian kings, Learn how their greatest monuments of fame, And strength, and art, are easily outdone By spirits reprobate, and in an hour, What in an age they, with incessant toil And hands innumerable, scarce perform. Nigh on the plain, in many cells prepared, That underneath had veins of liquid fire Sluiced from the lake, a second multitude, With wondrous art, founded the massy ore, Severing each kind, and scummed the bullion dross, A third as soon had formed within the ground A various mould, and from the boiling cells, By strange conveyance, filled each hollow nook, As in an organ, from one blast of wind, To many a row of pipes the soundboard breathes. Anon, out of the earth, a fabric huge Rose like an exhalation, with the sound Of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet, Built like a temple, where pilasters round Were set, and Doric pillars overlaid With golden architrave. Nor did there want Cornice or frieze, with bossy sculptures graven. The roof was fretted gold. Not Babylon, 24 PARADISE LOST. [Book 1–718–749. Nor great Alcairo,' such magnificence Equalled in all their glories, to enshrine Belus or Serapis, their gods, or seat Their kings, when Egypt with Assyria strove In wealth and luxury. The ascending pile Soon fixed her stately height; and straight the doors, Opening their brazen folds, discover, wide - Within, her ample spaces, o'er the smooth And level pavement. From the arched roof, Pendent by subtle magic, many a row Of starry lamps and blazing cressets, fed With naphtha and asphaltus, yielded light As from a sky. The hasty multitude Admiring entered; and the work some praise, And some the architect. His hand was known In heaven by many a towered structure high, Where sceptred angels held their residence, And sat as princes, whom the supreme King Exalted to such power, and gave to rule, Each in his hierarchy, the orders bright. Nor was his name unheard or unadored In ancient Greece; and in the Ausonian land Men called him Mulciber; and how he fell From heaven, they fabled, thrown by angry Jove Sheer o'er the crystal battlements: from morn To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve, A summer's day; and with the setting sun Dropped from the zenith, like a falling star, On Lemnos, AEgean isle. Thus they relate, Erring; for he with this rebellious rout Fell long before; nor aught availed him now To have built in heaven high towers, nor did he 'scape i Alcairo.—Memphis. * Erring.—Milton thus links the tradition concerning Vulcan in the Greek mythology with that of a workman of a higher order. Their summons called From every band and squared regiment, By place or choice the worthiest. Aook /, /imes 757-759. Book I.-750–782.] PARADISE LOST. g . 25 By all his engines, but was headlong'sent With his industrious crew to build in Hell. Meanwhile the winged heralds, by command Of sovereign power, with awful ceremony And trumpet's sound, throughout the host proclaim A solemn council, forthwith to be held At Pandemonium, the high capital Of Satan and his peers. Their summons called From every band and squared regiment, By place or choice the worthiest ; they anon, With hundreds and with thousands, trooping came, Attended. All access was thronged; the gates And porches wide, but chief the spacious hall— Though like a covered field, where champions bold Wont ride in armed, and at the Soldan's' chair Defied the best of Panimº chivalry To mortal combat, or career with lance— Thick swarmed, both on the ground and in the air, Brushed with the hiss of rustling wings. As bees In spring-time, when the sun with Taurus rides, Pour forth their populous youth about the hive In clusters; they among fresh dews and flowers Fly to and fro, or on the smoothed plank, The suburb of their straw-built citadel, New rubbed, with balm, expatiate and confer Their state affairs, so thick the aéry crowd Swarmed and were straitened, till, the signal given, Behold a wonder! They but now who seemed In bigness to surpass earth's giant sons, Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room Throng numberless like that Pygmean race Beyond the Indian mount; or fairy elves, Whose midnight revels by a forest side D Solaan-Sultan. * Panim.— Pagan—not Christian. 26 PARADISE LOST. [Book I.-783–798. **s. Or fountain, some belated peasant sees, Or dreams he sees, while overhead the moon Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth Wheels her pale course; they, on their mirth and dance Intent, with jocund music charm his ear; At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds. Thus incorporeal spirits to smallest forms Reduced their shapes immense, and were at large, Though without number still, amidst the hall Of that infernal court. But far within, - And in their own dimensions, like themselves, The great seraphic lords and cherubim In close recess and secret conclave sat ; A thousand demi-gods, on golden seats, Frequent and full. After short silence then. And summons read, the great consult began. · High on a throne of royal state, which far Outshone the wealth of Ormus and of Ind. 26 ^, Book XI., lines I, 2. BOOK II. The consultation begun, Satan debates whether another battle be to be hazarded for the recovery of heaven. Some advise it, others dissuade: a third proposal is preferred, mentioned before by Satan, to search the truth of that prophecy or tradition in heaven concerning another world, and another kind of creature, equal or not much inferior to themselves, about this time to be created. Their doubt, who shall be sent on this difficult search ; Satan, their chief, undertakes alone the voyage, is honoured and applauded. The council thus ended, the rest betake them several ways, and to several employments, as their inclinations lead them, to entertain the time till Satan return. He passes on his journey to hell-gates; finds them shut, and who sat there to guard them ; by whom at length they are opened, and discover to him the great gulf between hell and heaven; with what difficulty he passes through, directed by Chaos, the powct of that place, to the sight of this new world which he sought. ſ TIGH on a throne of royal state, which far Outshone the wealth of Ormus and of Ind," Or where the gorgeous East, with richest hand, Showers on her kings barbaric pearl and gold, Satan exalted sat, by merit raised To that bad eminence; and, from despair Thus high uplifted beyond hope, aspires Beyond thus high ; insatiate to pursue Vain war with Heaven ; and, by success untaught,” His proud imaginations thus displayed : Powers and Dominions, Deities of Heaven For since no deep within her gulf can hold Immortal vigour, though oppressed and fallen, I give not Heaven for lost. From this descent Celestial virtues rising, will appear More glorious and more dread than from no fall, | And trust themselves to fear no second fate. Me though just right, and the fixed laws of Heaven. Did first create your leader; next, free choice, With what besides, in counsel or in fight, * Wealth of Ormus and of Ind—Precious stones which came from India, and of which Ormus, an island in the Red Sea, was the great mart. - © * By success untaught.—A classical form of expression, meaning untaught by events—by experience. 28 PARADISE LOST. (Book II—ai-sa. Hath been achieved of merit; yet this loss, Thus far at least recovered, hath much In Ore Established in a safe unenvied throne, Yielded with full consent. The happier state In Heaven, which follows dignity, might draw Envy from each inferior; but who here Will envy whom the highest place exposes Foremost to stand against the Thunderer's aim, Your bulwark, and condemns to greatest share Of endless pain 2 Where there is then no good For which to strive, no strife can grow up there From faction. For none sure will claim in Hell Precedence—none, whose portion is so small Of present pain, that with ambitious Imind Will covet more. With this advantage then To union, and firm faith, and firm accord, More than can be in Heaven, we now return To claim our just inheritance of old, Surer to prosper than prosperity O Could have assured us; and, by what best way, Whether of open war, or covert guile, We now debate: who can advise, may speak. He ceased; and next him Moloch, sceptred king, Stood up, the strongest and the fiercest spirit That fought in Heaven, now fiercer by despair. His trust was with the Eternal to be deemed Equal in strength, and rather than be less, Cared not to be at all. With that care lost Went all his fear; of God, or hell, or worse, He recked not; and these words thereafter spake: My sentence is for open war. Of wiles, More unexpert, I boast not; them let those Contrive who need, or when they need, not now. For, while they sit contriving, shall the rest, Book II.--55-88.] • PARADISE LOST. 29 Millions that stand in arms, and longing wait The signal to ascend, sit lingering here, e Heaven's fugitives, and for their dwelling-place Accept this dark opprobrious den of shame, The prison of his tyranny who reigns By our delay? No! let us rather choose, Armed with hell flames and fury, all at once, O'er Heaven's high towers to force resistless way, Turning our tortures into horrid arms Against the torturer; when, to meet the noise Of his almighty engine, he shall hear Infernal thunder, and, for lightning, see Black fire and horror shot with equal rage Among his Angels, and his throne itself Mixed with Tartarean sulphur and strange fire, His own invented torments. But perhaps The way seems difficult and steep to scale With upright wing against a higher foe. Let-such bethink them, if the sleepy drench Of that forgetful lake benumb not still, That in our proper motion we ascend Up to our native seat: descent and fall To us is adverse. Who but felt of late, When the fierce foe hung on our broken rear Insulting, and pursued us through the deep, With what compulsion and laborious flight We sunk thus low 2 The ascent is easy then. The event is feared; should we again provoke Our stronger, some worse way his wrath may find To our destruction,--if there be in hell - Fear to be worse destroyed. What can be worse Than to dwell here, driven out from bliss, condemned In this abhorred deep to utter woe, Where pain of unextinguishable fire 3O PARADISE LOST. - [Book II.-89-12o. Must exercise us' without hope of end, The vassals of his anger, when the scourge Inexorable, and the torturing hour, Call us to penance? More destroyed than thus We should be quite abolished, and expire. What fear we, then 2 What doubt we to incense His utmost ire, which, to the height enraged, Will either quite consume us, and reduce To nothing this essential—happier far Than miserable to have eternal being— Or, if our substance be indeed divine, And cannot cease to be, we are at worst On this side nothing; and by proof we feel Our power sufficient to disturb his heaven, ‘And with perpetual inroads to alarm, Though inaccessible, his fatal throne, Which, if not victory, is yet revenge. He ended, frowning, and his look denounced” Desperate revenge, and battle dangerous To less than gods. On the other side up rose Belial, in act more graceful and humane; A fairer person lost not heaven; he seemed For dignity composed, and high exploit: But all was false and hollow; though his tongue Dropt manna, and could make the worse appear The better reason, to perplex and dash Maturest counsels: for his thoughts were low : To vice industrious, but to nobler deeds Timorous and slothful ; yet he pleased the ear, And with persuasive accent thus began : I should be much for open war, O peers, As not behind in hate; if what was urged ! E:rercise ass.--Torment or try us—the Latin sense of the word. * Denounced.—Menaced. proclaimed. Book ii-ia-isºl PARADISE LOST. 31 Main reason to persuade immediate war, Did not dissuade me most, and seem to cast Ominous conjecture on the whole success; When he, who most excels in fact of arms, In what he counsels, and in what excels, Mistrustful grounds his courage on despair And utter dissolution, as the scope Of all his aim, after some dire revenge. First, what revenge 2 The towers of heaven are filled With armed watch, that render all access - Impregnable. Oft on the bordering deep Encamp their legions; or, with obscure wing Scout, far and wide into the realm of night, Scorning surprise. Or could we break our way By force, and at our heels all hell should rise With blackest insurrection, to confound Heaven's purest light ; yet our great Enemy, All incorruptible, would on his throne Sit unpolluted, and the ethereal mould, Incapable of stain, would soon expel Her mischief, and purge off the baser fire, Victorious. Thus repulsed, our final hope Is flat despair: we must exasperate - The Almighty Victor to spend all His rage, And that must end us; that must be our cure, To be no more. Sad cure for who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being, Those thoughts that wander through eternity, To perish rather, swallowed up and lost In the wide womb of uncreated night, Devoid of sense and motion ? And who knows, Let this be good, whether our angry Foe Can give it, or will ever ? How he can, Is doubtful : that he never will, is sure. 32 PARADISE LOST. iBook 11.- 155 188. Unrespited, unpitied, unreprieved, Will he, so wise, let loose at once his ire, Belike through impotence, or unaware, To give his enemies their wish, and end Them in his anger, whom his anger saves To punish endless 2 Wherefore cease we then 2 Say they who counsel war—We are decreed, Reserved, and destined to eternal woe: Whatever doing, what can we suffer more, What can we suffer worse 2 Is this then worst, Thus sitting, thus consulting, thus in arms ? What! when we fled amain, pursued, and struck With heaven's afflicting thunder, and besought The deep to shelter us? This hell then seemed A refuge from those wounds, or when we lay Chained on the burning lake 2 That sure was worse. What if the breath that kindled those grim fires Awaked, should blow them into sevenfold rage, And plunge us in the flames 2 Or, from above, Should intermitted vengeance arm again His red right hand to plague us? What if all Her stores were opened, and this firmament Of Hell should spout her cataracts of fire, Impendent horrors, threatening hideous fall One day upon our heads, while we, perhaps, Designing or exhorting glorious war, Caught in a fiery tempest, shall be hurled Each on his rock transfixed, the sport and prey Of racking whirlwinds, or for ever sunk Under yon boiling ocean, wrapped in chains, There to converse with everlasting groans, Ages of hopeless end ? This would be worse. War, therefore, open or concealed, alike My voice dissuades; for what can force or guile Book II.-189–222.] PARADISE LOST. g 33 With him, or who deceive his mind, whose eye Views all things at one view He from heaven's height All these our motions vain sees, and derides; Not more almighty to resist our might, Than wise to frustrate all our plots and wiles. Shall we then live thus vile, the race of heaven Thus trampled, thus expelled to suffer here Chains and these torments 2 Better these than worse, By my advice; since fate inevitable Subdues us, and omnipotent decree, The Victor's will. To suffer, as to do, Our strength is equal, nor the law unjust That so ordains: this was at first resolved, If we were wise, against so great a Foe Contending, and so doubtful what might fall. I laugh, when those who at the spear are bold And venturous, if that fail them, shrink and fear What yet they know must follow, to endure Exile, or ignominy, or bonds, or pain, The sentence of their Conqueror. This is now Our doom; which if we can sustain and bear, Our Supreme Foe in time may much remit His anger, and perhaps, thus far removed, Not mind us not offending, satisfied With what is punished; whence these raging files Will slacken, if His breath stir not their flames. Our purer essence then will overcome Their noxious vapour; or, inured, not feel ; Or, changed at length, and to the place conformed In temper and in nature, will receive Familiar the fierce heat, and void of pain. This horror will grow mild, this darkness light: Besides what hope the never-ending flight Of future days may bring, what chance, what change F 34 PARADISE . LOST. [Book II.-223–256. Wortn waiting: since our present lot appears For happy, though but ill; for ill, not worst; If we procure not to ourselves more woe. Thus Belial, with words clothed in reason's garb, Counselled ignoble ease, and peaceful sloth, Not peace: And after him thus Mammon spake: Either to disenthrone the King of Heaven We war, if war be best, or to regain Our own right lost. Him to unthrone we then May hope, when everlasting Fate shall yield To fickle Chance, and Chaos judge the strife. The former, vain to hope, argues as vain The latter; for what place can be for us Within heaven's bound, unless heaven's Lord supreme We overpower P Suppose he should relent, And publish grace to all, on promise made Of new subjection; with what eyes could we Stand in his presence humble, and receive Strict laws imposed, to celebrate his throne With warbled hymns, and to his Godhead sing Forced hallelujahs, while he lordly sits Our envied Sovereign, and his altar breathes Ambrosial odours and ambrosial flowers, Our servile offerings? This must be our task In heaven, this our delight. How wearisome Eternity so spent, in worship paid To whom we hate | Let us not then pursue By force impossible, by leave obtained Unacceptable, though in heaven, our state Of splendid vassalage; but rather seek Our own good from ourselves, and from our own Live to ourselves, though in this vast recess, Free, and to none accountable, preferring Hard liberty before the easy yoke book II.-257–290.] PARADISE LOST. 35 Of servile pomp. Our greatness will appear Then most conspicuous, when great things of small, Useful of hurtful, prosperous of adverse, We can create; and in what place soe'er Thrive under evil, and work ease out of pain, Through labour and endurance. This deep world Of darkness do we dread How oft amidst . Thick clouds and dark doth heaven's all-ruling Sire Choose to reside, his glory unobscured, And with the majesty of darkness round Covers his throne; from whence deep thunders roar, Mustering their rage, and heaven resembles hell ? As he our darkness, cannot we his light. Imitate, when we please ? This desert soil Wants not her hidden lustre, gems and gold; Nor want we skill or art, from whence to raise Magnificence; and what can heaven show more? Our torments also may in length of time Become our elements; these piercing fires As soft as now severe, our temper changed Into their temper; which must needs remove The sensible of pain. All things invite To peaceful counsels, and the settled state Of order, how in safety best we may Compose our present evils, with regard Of what we are, and where, dismissing quite All thoughts of war. Ye have what I advise. Aº He scarce had finished, when such murmur filled The assembly, as when hollow rocks retain - The sound of blustering winds, which all night long Had roused the sea, now with hoarse cadence lull Seafaring men o'erwatched, whose bark by chance Or pinnace, anchors in a craggy bay After the tempest, such applause was heard PARADISE LOST. 1BOOK II.-291-324. As Mammon ended, and his sentence pleased, Advising peace. For such another field They dreaded worse than hell, so much the fear Of thunder and the sword of Michaël Wrought still within them. And no less desire To found this nether empire, which might rise By policy, and long process of time, In emulation opposite to heaven. Which when Beélzebub perceived, than whom, Satan except, none higher sat, with grave Aspect he rose, and in his rising seemed A pillar of state. Deep on his front engraven Deliberation sat, and public care; And princely counsel in his face yet shone, Majestic, though in ruin. Sage he stood, With Atlantean shoulders, fit to bear The weight of mightiest monarchies. His look Drew audience and attention still as night Or summer's noontide air, while thus he spake: Thrones, and imperial powers, offspring of heaven, Ethereal virtues / or these titles now Must we renounce, and, changing style, be called Princes of hell ? For so the popular vote Inclines, here to continue, and build up here A growing empire. Doubtless, while we dream, And know not that the King of Heaven hath doomed This place our dungeon, not our safe retreat Beyond his potent arm, to live exempt From heaven's high jurisdiction, in new league Banded against his throne, but to remain - In strictest bondage, though thus far removed, Under the inevitable curb reserved, His captive multitude : for he, be sure, In height or depth, still first and last will reign Book 11–325–338) PARADISE LOST. 37 Sole king, and of His kingdom lose no part By our revolt, but over hell extend His empire, and with iron sceptre rule Us here, as with his golden those in heaven. What sit we then projecting peace and war 2 War hath determined us, and foiled with loss Irreparable; terms of peace yet none Vouchsafed or sought ; for what peace will be given To us enslaved, but custody severe, And stripes, and arbitrary punishment, Inflicted 2 and what peace can we return, But to our power hostility and hate, Untamed reluctance, and revenge, though slow, Yet ever plotting how the Conqueror least May reap his conquest, and may least rejoice In doing what we most in suffering feel 2 Nor will occasion want, nor shall we need With dangerous expedition to invade Heaven, whose high walls fear no assault or siege, Or ambush from the deep. What if we find Some easier enterprise 2 There is a place– If ancient and prophetic fame in heaven Err not, -another world, the happy seat Of some new race, called Man, about this time To be created like to us, though less In power and excellence, but favoured more Of him who rules above. So was his will Pronounced among the gods, and by an oath, That shook Heaven's whole circumference, confirmed. Thither let us bend all our thoughts, to learn What creatures there inhabit, of what mould Or substance, how endued, and what their power, And where their weakness, how attempted best, By force or subtlety. Though heaven be shut, PARADISE LOST. (Book 11–359-392 And heaven's high Arbitrator sit secure In his own strength, this place may lie exposed, The utmost border of his kingdom, left To their defence who hold it. Here perhaps Some advantageous act may be achieved By sudden onset, either with hell-fire To waste his whole creation, or possess All as our own, and drive, as we were driven, The puny habitants. Or, if not drive, - Seduce them to our party, that their God May prove their foe, and with repenting hand Abolish his own works. This would Surpass Common revenge, and interrupt his joy In our confusion, and our joy upraise In his disturbance; when his darling sons, Hurled headlong to partake with us, shall curse Their frail original, and faded bliss, - Faded so soon. Advise, if this be worth Attempting, or to sit in darkness here Hatching vain empires.—Thus Beélzebub Pleaded his devilish counsel, first devised By Satan, and in part proposed. For whence, But from the author of all ill, could spring So deep a malice, to confound the race Of mankind in one root, and earth with hell To mingle and involve, done all to spite The great Creator But their spite still serves His glory to augment. The bold design Pleased highly those infernal states, and joy Sparkled in all their eyes. With full assent They vote. Whereat his speech he thus renews: Well have ye judged, well ended long debate, Synod of gods ! and, like to what ye are, Great things resolved, which, from the lowest deep, Book II.-393-426) PARADISE LOST. - 39 Will once more lift us up, in spite of fate, Nearer our ancient seat. Perhaps in view Of those bright confines, whence, with neighbouring arms, And opportune excursion, we may chance Re-enter heaven; or else in some mild zone Dwell, not unvisited of heaven's fair light Secure, and at the brightening orient beam Purge off this gloom ; the soft delicious air, To heal the scar of these corrosive fires, Shall breathe her balm. But first, whom shall we send In search of this new world 2 Whom shall we find Sufficient? Who shall tempt with wandering feet The dark, unbottomed, infinite abyss, And through the palpable obscure find out His uncouth way, or spread his aéry flight, Upborne with indefatigable wings, - Over the vast abrupt, ere he arrive The happy isle 2 What strength, what art, can then Suffice, or what evasion bear him safe Through the strict sentries and stations thick Of Angels watching round 2 Here he had need All circumspection ; and we now no less Choice in our suffrage; for, on whom we send, The weight of all, and our last hope, relies. This said, he sat; and expectation held His look suspense, awaiting who appeared To second, or oppose, or undertake, The perilous attempt. But all sat mute, Pondering the danger with deep thoughts; and each In other's countenance read his own dismay, Astonished. None among the choice and prime Of those heaven-warring champions could be found So hardy, as to proffer or accept Alone the dreadful voyage; till at last 4.O PARADISE LOST. [Book II.-427-453, Satan, whom now transcendent glory raised Above his fellows, with monarchal pride, Conscious of highest worth, unmoved thus spake: O progeny of Heaven empyreal Thrones With reason hath deep silence and demur Seized us, though undismayed. Long is the way And hard, that out of hell leads up to light ; Our prison strong; this huge convex of fire, Outrageous to devour, immures us round Ninefold, and gates of burning adamant, Barred over us, prohibit all egress. * These passed, if any pass, the void profound Of unessential night receives him next Wide gaping, and with utter loss of being Threatens him, plunged in that abortive gulf If thence he 'scape into whatever world, Or unknown region, what remains him less Than unknown dangers, and as hard escape 2 But I should ill become this throne, O peers, And this imperial sovereignty, adorned With splendour, armed with power, if aught proposed And judged of public moment, in the shape Of difficulty or danger, could deter Me from attempting. Wherefore do I assume These royalties, and not refuse to reign, Refusing to accept as great a share Of hazard as of honour, due alike To him who reigns, and so much to him due Of hazard more, as he above the rest High honoured sits P Go, therefore, mighty powers, Terror of heaven, though fallen intend at home— While here shall be our home, what best may ease The present misery, and render Hell More tolerable; if there be cure or charm Book 11–461–492.] PARADISE LOST. 4 To respite, or deceive, or slack the pain Of this ill mansion. Intermit no watch Against a wakeful Foe, while I abroad, Through all the coasts of dark destruction seek Deliverance for us all. This enterprise None shall partake with me. Thus saying, rose The monarch, and prevented all reply: Prudent, lest, from his resolution raised, Others among the chief might offer now— Certain to be refused—what erst they feared, And, so refused, might in opinion stand His rivals, winning cheap the high repute, Which he through hazard huge must earn. But they Dreaded not more the adventure, than his voice Forbidding; and at once with him they rose. Their rising all at once was as the sound Of thunder heard remote. Toward him they bend With awful reverence prone; and as a god Extol him equal to the Highest in heaven. Nor failed they to express how much they praised, That for the general safety he despised His own. For neither do the spirits damned Lose all their virtue; lest bad men should boast Their specious deeds on earth, which glory excites, Or close ambition, varnished o'er with zeal. Thus they their doubtful consultations dark Ended, rejoicing in their matchless chief - As when from mountain-tops the dusky clouds Ascending, while the north wind sleeps, o'erspread Heaven's cheerful face, the louring element' Scowls o'er the darkened landskip snow, or shower, If chance the radiant sun, with farewell sweet, * Blement.—The higher atmosphere, the elements filling it. G PARADISE LOST.’ [BOOK II.-493-524. Extend his evening beam, the fields revive, The birds their notes renew, and bleating herds Attest their joy, that hill and valley rings. O shame to men Devil with devil damned Firm concord holds, men only disagree Of creatures rational, though under hope Of heavenly grace; and, God proclaiming peace, Yet live in hatred, enmity, and strife, Among themselves, and levy cruel wars, Wasting the earth, each other to destroy: As if—which might induce us to accord— Man had not hellish foes enow besides, - That day and night for his destruction wait. The Stygian council thus dissolved, and forth In order came the grand infernal peers. Midst came their mighty paramount,' and seemed Alone the antagonist of Heaven, nor less Than Hell's dread emperor, with pomp supreme, And god-like imitated state. Him round A globe of fiery seraphim enclosed With bright emblazonry, and horrent arms. Then, of their session ended, they bid cry With trumpets' regal sound the great result. Toward the four winds four speedy cherubim Put to their mouths the sounding alchemy,” By herald's voice explained ; the hollow abyss Heard far and wide, and all the host of Hell With deafening shout returned them loud acclaim. Thence more at ease their minds, and somewhat raised By false presumptuous hope, the ranged powers Disband, and, wandering, each his several way Pursues, as inclination or sad choice "Paramount.—Chief—lord paramount. * Sounding alchemy.—The metal of which trumpets are made. BOOK II.-525-554-J PARADISE LOST. . 43 Leads him, perplexed where he may likeliest find Truce to his restless thoughts, and entertain The irksome hours, till his great chief return. Part on the plain, or in the air sublime Upon the wing, or in swift race contend, As at the Olympian games or Pythian fields;" Part curb their fiery steeds, or shun the goal With rapid wheels, or fronted brigads form. As when, to warn proud cities, war appears Waged in the troubled sky, and armies rush To battle in the clouds, before each van Prick forth the aëry knights, and couch their spears Till thickest legions close; with feats of arms From either end of heaven the welkin burns. Others, with vast Typhoean rage, more fell, . Rend up both rocks and hills, and ride the air In whirlwind. Hell scarce holds the wild uproar. As when Alcides, from CEchalia crowned With conquest, felt the envenomed robe, and tore Through pain up by the roots Thessalian pines, And Lichas from the top of CEta threw Into the Euboic sea. Others, more mild, Retreated in a silent valley, sing With notes angelical to many a harp Their own heroic deeds, and hapless fall By doom of battle; and complain that fate Free virtue should enthral to force or chance. Their song was partial ; but the harmony— What could it less when spirits immortal sing 2– Suspended Hell, and took with ravishment * As at the Olympian games or Pythian fields.-The Olympic games, in part described in the text, had descended as a custom from early times in Greek history, and were celebrated every four years. An Olympiad in Greek chronology consisted of these four years. * As when Alcides.—A name given to Hercules. * Suspended IHell.—Helped them to forget it. 44 Z PARADISE LOST. |BOOK II.-555–586, The thronging audience. In discourse more sweet— For eloquence the soul, song charms the sense— Others apart sat on a hill retired, In thoughts more elevate, and reasoned high Of providence, foreknowledge, will, and fate; Fixed fate, free will, foreknowledge absolute, And found no end, in wandering mazes lost. Of good and evil much they argued then, Of happiness and final misery, Passion and apathy, and glory and shame, Vain wisdom all, and false philosophy. Yet, with a pleasing sorcery, could charm Pain for a while, or anguish, and excite Fallacious hope, or arm the obdured breast With stubborn patience, as with triple steel. Another part, in squadrons and gross bands, On bold adventure to discover wide That dismal world, if any clime perhaps Might yield them easier habitation, bend Four ways their flying march, along the banks Of four infernal rivers, that disgorge Into the burning lake their baleful streams: Abhorred Styx, the flood of deadly hate; Sad Acheron,' of sorrow, black and deep; Cocytus, named of lamentation loud Heard on the rueful stream ; fierce Phlegethon,” Whose waves of torrent fire inflame with rage. Far off from these, a slow and silent stream, Lethe, the river of oblivion, rolls Her watery labyrinth, whereof who drinks, Forthwith his former state and being forgets, Forgets both joy and grief, pleasure and pain. * Sad Acheron.—A river in the region of the lost, also called Cocytus, and said to utter a wail of sorrow as it flows. * Fierce Phlegethon. —Another of the infernal rivers, sometimes described as the fierce and bloody. BOOK II.-587–617.] PARADISE LOST. 45 Beyond this flood a frozen continent Lies dark and wild, beat with perpetual storms Of whirlwind and dire hail, which on firm land Thaws not, but gathers heap, and ruin seems Of ancient pile; or else deep snow and ice, A gulf profound as that Serbonian bog” Betwixt Damiata and mount Casius old, - Where armies whole have sunk. The parching air Burns frone,” and cold performs the effect of fire. Thither, by harpy-footed furies haled, At certain revolutions, all the damned Are brought; and feel by turns the bitter change Of fierce extremes, extremes by change more fierce; From beds of raging fire, to starve in ice Their soft ethereal warmth, and there to pine Immovable, infixed, and frozen round, Periods of time; thence hurried back to fire. They ferry over this Lethean sound -sº Both to and fro, their sorrow to augment, * And wish and struggle, as they pass, to reach The tempting stream, with one small drop to lose In sweet forgetfulness all pain and woe, All in one moment, and so near the brink; But fate withstands, and to oppose the attempt Medusa' with Gorgonian terror guards The ford, and of itself the water flies All taste of living wight, as once it fled The lip of Tantalus. Thus roving on In confused march forlorn, the adventurous bands, With shuddering horror pale, and eyes aghast, Viewed first their lamentable lot, and found * Serbonian bog.—A lake, with its adjacent marsh, near one of the mouths of the Nile. * IRurns frone.—Burns frosty. Intense cold becomes heat. “When the cold north wind bloweth, it devoureth the mountains, and burneth the wilderness, and consumeth the grass as fire.” (Ecclus. xlii. 20, 21.) * Medusa.-One of the three fearful sisters known by the name of Gorgons. Their heads are said to have been covered with hissing serpents in place of hair, and they had brazen claws, enormous teeth, and wings. PARADISE LOST. - [Boos II.-618-649. No rest. Through many a dark and dreary vale They passed, and many a region dolorous, - O'er many a frozen, many a fiery Alp, Rocks, caves, lakes, fens, bogs, dens, and shades of death, A universe of death, which God by curse - Created evil, for evil only good; Where all life dies, death lives, and Nature breeds Perverse, all monstrous, all prodigious things, Abominable, unutterable, and worse Than fables yet have feigned, or fear conceived, Gorgons, and Hydras, and Chimeras dire.' Meanwhile, the adversary of God and man, Satan, with thoughts inflamed of highest design, Puts on swift wings, and towards the gates of hell Explores his solitary flight. Sometimes. He scours the right-hand coast, sometimes the left; Now shaves with level wing the deep, then soars Up to the fiery concave towering high. As when far off at sea a fleet descried Hangs in the clouds, by equinoxial winds Close sailing from Bengala, or the isles Of Ternate and Tidore, whence merchants bring Their spicy drugs; they on the trading flood, Through the wide Ethiopian to the Cape, Ply stemming nightly toward the pole: so seemed Far off the flying fiend. At last appear Hell-bounds, high reaching to the horrid roof, And thrice threefold the gates. Threefolds were brass, Three iron, three of adamantine rock Impenetrable, impaled with circling fire, Yet unconsumed. Before the gates there sat ‘On either side a formidable shape; * Gorgons and Hydras, and Chimeras dire.—Virgil and Tasso had fixed all these monstrous existences in their bell long since. Sº §§§ -> A "^^*** A A ſº * 2 Gorgons p. 46. ire. imeras d and Ch and Hydras Fook II., lime 628. Before the gates there sat On either side a formidable shape. Book //, lines 648, 649. Book II.-650-680.] PARADISE LOST. 47 The one seemed woman to the waist, and fair; But ended foul in many a scaly fold Voluminous and vast, a serpent armed With mortal sting. About her middle round A cry of hell-hounds never-ceasing barked, With wide Cerberian mouths, full loud, and rung A hideous peal. Yet when they list, would creep, If aught disturbed their noise, into her womb, And kennel there; yet there still barked and howled Within, unseen. Far less abhorred than these Vexed Scylla, bathing in the sea that parts Calabria from the hoarse Trinacrian’ shore. Nor uglier follow the night-hag, when, called In secret, riding through the air she comes, Lured with the smell of infant blood, to dance With Lapland witches, while the labouring moon Eclipses at their charms. The other shape, If shape it might be called that shape had none Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb, - Or substance might be called that shadow seemed, For each seemed either—black it stood as Night, Fierce as ten Furies, terrible as Hell, And shook a dreadful dart; what seemed his head The likeness of a kingly crown had on. Satan was now at hand, and from his seat The monster moving onward, came as fast With horrid strides; Hell trembled as he strode. The undaunted fiend what this might be admired,” Admired, not feared. God and His Son except, * Created thing nought valued he, nor shunned; And with disdainful look thus first began : * Cerberian mouths.-Cerberus, the name given to the dog said to guard the entrance to the infernal regions. Commonly described as having three heads, but by some poets as having many more. * Trinacrian.—Sicilian. * Admired.—Wondered. PARADISE LOST. [Book II.-681-712. Whence, and what art thou, execrable shapel That darest, though grim and terrible, advance Thy miscreated front athwart my way To yonder gates ? Through them I mean to pass, That be assured, without leave asked of thee. Retire, or taste thy folly, and learn by proof, Hell-born, not to contend with spirits of heaven To whom the goblin, full of wrath, replied: Art thou that traitor-angel, art thou he, Who first broke peace in Heaven, and faith, till then Unbroken; and in proud rebellious arms, Drew after him the third part of heaven's sons Conjured against the Highest ; for which both thou And they, outcast from God, are here condemned To waste eternal days in woe and pain 2 And reckonest thou thyself with Spirits of Heaven, Hell-doomed, and breathest defiance here and scorn, Where I reign king, and, to enrage thee more, Thy king and lord 2 Back to thy punishment, False fugitive, and to thy speed add wings, Lest with a whip of scorpions I pursue Thy lingering, or with one stroke of this dart Strange horror seize thee, and pangs unfelt before. So spake the grizzly Terror, and in shape, So speaking and so threatening, grew tenfold More dreadful and deform. On the other side, Incensed with indignation, Satan stood Unterrified, and like a comet burned, That fires the length of Ophiuchus huge' In the arctic sky, and from his horrid hair Shakes pestilence and war. Each at the head Levelled his deadly aim ; their fatal hands * Ophiuchus huge.—i.e., serpent-holder; one of the northern constellations. Book II.-713-746.] PARADISE LOST. 49 No second stroke intend ; and such a frown Each cast at the other, as when two black clouds, With heaven's artillery fraught, come rattling on Over the Caspian, then stand front to front, Hovering a space, till winds the signal blow To join their dark encounter in mid-air: So frowned the mighty combatants, that Hell Grew darker at their frown ; so matched they stood, For never but once more was either like To meet so great a Foe: And now great deeds Had been achieved, whereof all Hell had rung, Had not the snaky sorceress that sat Fast by hell-gate, and kept the fatal key, Risen, and with hideous outcry rushed between. O father! what intends thy hands, she cried, Against thy only son 2 What fury, O son Possesses thee to bend that mortal dart Against thy father's head 2 and know'st for whom ; For Him who sits above, and laughs the while At thee ordained his drudge, to execute - Whate'er His wrath, which He calls justice, bids; His wrath, which one day will destroy ye both ! She spake, and at her words the hellish pest Forbore; then these to her Satan returned : So strange thy outcry, and thy words so strange Thou interposest, that my sudden hand, Prevented, spares to tell thee yet by deeds What it intends, till first I know of thee, What thing thou art, thus double-formed, and why, In this infernal vale first met, thou call'st Me father, and that phantasm call'st my son: I know thee not, nor ever saw till now Sight more detestable than him and thee. To whom thus the portress of hell-gate replied: - H 5O PARADISE LOST. - |BOOK II.-747–78o, Hast thou forgot me then, and do I seem Now in thine eye so foul, once deemed so fair In Heaven? when at the assembly, and in sight Of all the seraphim with thee combined In bold conspiracy against Heaven's King, All on a sudden miserable pain Surprised thee; dim thine eyes, and dizzy swum In darkness, while thy head flames thick and fast Threw forth; till, on the left side opening wide, Likest to thee in shape and countenance bright, Then shining heavenly fair, a goddess armed, Out of thy head I sprung. Amazement seized All the host of heaven; back they recoiled afraid At first, and called me Sin, and for a sign Portentous held me; but, familiar grown, I pleased, and with attractive graces won The most averse, thee chiefly, who full oft Thyself in me thy perfect image viewing, Became enamoured, and such joy thou took'st With me in secret, that my womb conceived A growing burden. Meanwhile war arose, And fields were fought in heaven; wherein remained— For what could else?—to our Almighty Foe Clear victory; to our part loss and rout, Through all the Empyréan. Down they fell, Driven headlong from the pitch of heaven, down Into this deep ; and in the general fall, I also ; at which time, this powerful key Into my hand was given, with charge to keep These gates for ever shut, which none can pass Without my opening. Pensive here I sat - Alone; but long I sat not, till my womb, Pregnant by thee, and now excessive grown, Prodigious motion felt, and rueful throes. Book II.-781–812.1 PARADISE LOST. 5 I At last this odious offspring whom thou seest, Thine own begotten, breaking violent way, Tore through my entrails, that, with fear and pain Distorted, all my nether shape thus grew Transformed. But he my inbred enemy Forth issued, brandishing his fatal dart, Made to destroy. I fled, and cried out Death ſ Hell trembled at the hideous name, and sighed Far from her caves, and back resounded, Death ! I fled; but he pursued—though more, it seems, Inflamed with lust than rage—and, swifter far, Me overtook, his mother, all dismayed, And in embraces forcible and foul Ingendering with me, of that rape begot These yelling monsters, that with ceaseless cry Surround me, as thou sawest; hourly conceived And hourly born, with sorrow infinite To me; for, when they list, into the womb That bred them they return, and howl, and gnaw My bowels, their repast; then bursting forth Afresh, with conscious terrors vex me round, That rest or intermission none I find. Before mine eyes in opposition sits Grim Death, my son and foe, who sets them on, And me his parent would full soon devour For want of other prey, but that he knows His end with mine involved;" and knows that I Should prove a bitter morsel, and his bane, Whenever that shall be; so fate pronounced. But thou, O father, I forewarn thee, shun , His deadly arrow ; neither vainly hope To be invulnerable in those bright arms, His end with mine involved.—As death came by sin, the destruction of sin would bring an end to death. 52 PARADISE LOST. [Book II.-813 844. Though tempered heavenly; for that mortal dint, Save He who reigns above, none can resist. She finished; and the subtle fiend his lore Soon learned, now milder, and thus answered smooth : Dear daughter, since thou claim'st me for thy sire, And my fair son here show'st me, the dear pledge Of dalliance had with thee in heaven, and joys Then sweet, now sad to mention, through dire change Beſallen us, unforeseen, unthought of; know, I come no enemy, but to set free From out this dark and dismal house of pain Both him and thee, and all the heavenly host Of spirits, that, in our just pretences armed, Fell with us from on high. From them I go This uncouth errand sole; and, one for all, Myself expose, with lonely steps to tread - The unfounded deep, and through the void immense To search with wandering quest a place foretold Should be, and, by concurring signs, ere now Created, vast and round, a place of bliss In the purlieus' of heaven, and therein placed A race of upstart creatures, to supply Perhaps our vacant room ; though more removed, Lest heaven, surcharged with potent multitude, Might hap to move new broils. Be this or aught Than this more secret now designed, I haste To know; and, this once known, shall soon return. And bring ye to the place where thou and Death Shall dwell at ease, and up and down unseen Wing silently, the buxom air,” embalmed With odours; there ye shall be fed and filled Immeasurably, all things shall be your prey. * Parlieus.—Adjacent and open parts. * The burom air—Light, yielding. Book II.-845–878.] * PARADISE LOST. - 53 He ceased, for both seemed highly pleased; and Death Grinned horrible a ghastly smile, to hear - His famine should be filled; and blessed his maw Destined to that good hour. No less rejoiced His mother bad, and thus bespake her sire: The key of this infernal pit by due, And by command of heaven's all-powerful King, I keep, by him forbidden to unlock These adamantine gates; against all force Death ready stands to interpose his dart, Fearless to be o'ermatched by living might. But what owe I to His commands above Who hates me, and hath hither thrust me down Into this gloom of Tartarus profound, To sit in hateful office here confined, Inhabitant of heaven, and heavenly born, Here, in perpetual agony and pain, With terrors and with clamours compassed round Of mine own brood, that on my bowels feed 2 Thou art my father, thou my author, thou My being gavest me; whom should I obey But thee ? whom follow 2 Thou wilt bring me soon To that new world of light and bliss, among The gods who live at ease, where I shall reign At thy right hand voluptuous, as beseems Thy daughter and thy darling, without end. Thus saying, from her side the fatal key, Sad instrument of all our woe, she took ; And towards the gate rolling her bestial train, Forthwith the huge portcullis high updrew, Which but herself, not all the Stygian powers Could once have moved ; then in the key-hole turns The intricate wards, and every bolt and bar Of massy iron or solid rock with ease 54 PARADISE LOST. * LBook II.-879–910. Unfastens. On a sudden open fly, With impetuous recoil and jarring sound, The infernal doors, and on their hinges grate Harsh thunder, that the lowest bottom shook Of Erebus." She opened, but to shut Excelled her power: the gates wide open stood, That with extended wings a bannered host, Under spread ensigns marching, might pass through, With horse and chariots ranked in loose array; So wide they stood, and like a furnace-mouth Cast forth redounding smoke and ruddy flame. Before their eyes in sudden view appear The secrets of the hoary deep; a dark Illimitable ocean, without bound, Without dimension, where length, breadth, and height, And time, and place, are lost; where eldest Night And Chaos, ancestors of Nature, hold Eternal anarchy, amidst the noise Of endless wars, and by confusion stand. For Hot, Cold, Moist, and Dry, four champions fierce, Strive here for mastery, and to battle bring Their embryon atoms; they around the flag Of each his faction, in their several clans, Light-armed or heavy, sharp, smooth, swift, or slow, Swarm populous, unnumbered as the sands Of Barca or Cyrene's torrid soil, Levied to side with warring winds, and poise Their lighter wings. To whom these most adhere He rules a moment. Chaos, umpire sits, And by decision more embroils the fray By which he reigns. Next him, high arbiter, Chance governs all. Into this wild abyss, * Erebus-Dark shades below, through which spirits were supposed to pass into Hades. BOOK II.-911—944.] * PARADISE LOST. 55 The womb of Nature, and perhaps her grave, Of neither sea, nor shore, nor air, nor fire, But all these in their pregnant causes mixed Confusedly, and which thus must ever fight, Unless the Almighty Maker them ordain His dark materials to create more worlds; Into this wild abyss, the wary fiend Stood on the brink of hell, and looked awhile, Pondering his voyage; for no narrow frith He had to cross. Nor was his ear less pealed With noises loud and ruinous—to compare Great things with small—than when Bellona storms With all her battering engines bent to raze Some capital city; or less than if this frame Of heaven were falling, and these elements In mutiny had from her axle torn The steadfast earth. At last his sail-broad vans He spreads for flight, and in the surging smoke Uplifted spurns the ground; thence many a league, As in a cloudy chair, ascending, rides - Audacious; but, that seat soon failing, meets A vast vacuity. All unawares, - Fluttering his pennons vain, plumb down he drops Ten thousand fathom deep ; and to this hour Down had been falling, had not, by ill chance, The strong rebuff of some tumultuous cloud, Instinct with fire and nitre, hurried him As many miles aloft. That fury stayed, Quenched in a boggy syrtis, neither sea, Nor good dry land; nigh foundered, on he fares, Treading the crude consistence, half on foot, Half flying. Behoves him now both oar and sail. As when a gryphon, through the wilderness With winged course, o'er hill or moory dale, 56 PARADISE LOST. * [Book 11.-945-973. Pursues the Arimaspian,' who by stealth Had from his wakeful custody purloined The guarded gold : so eagerly the fiend O'er bog, or steep, through strait, rough, dense, or rare, With head, hands, wings, or feet, pursues his way, And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies. • At length a universal hubbub wild, Of stunning sounds, and voices all confused, Borne through the hollow dark, assaults his ear With loudest vehemence. Thither he plies, Undaunted, to meet there whatever power Or spirit of the nethermost abyss Might in that noise reside, of whom to ask Which way the nearest coast of darkness lies Bordering on light; when straight behold the throne Of Chaos,” and his dark pavilion spread - Wide on the wasteful deep; with him enthroned Sat sable-vested Night, eldest of things,” The consort of his reign; and by them stood Orcus and Hades," and the dreaded name Of Demogorgon;' Rumour next, and Chance, And Tumult, and Confusion, all embroiled, And Discord, with a thousand various mouths. To whom Satan turning boldly, thus: Ye powers And spirits of this nethermost abyss, Chaos and ancient Night, I come no spy, With purpose to explore or to disturb The secrets of your realm; but, by constraint Wandering this darksome desert, as my way A gryphon . . . pursues the Arimaspian-Gryphons were fabulous animals, half eagle, half lion, and supposed to be the special guardians of gold mines; while the Arimaspians were a people skilled and brave in possessing themselves of that sort of treasure. . . º • - - - * Chaos.-The spirit supposed to have its home amidst the “unformed and void.” * Night, eldest of things.-The command, “Let there be light,” supposes darkness—night to be older than day, than creation. * Orcus and Hades.—Orcus is supposed to mean Pluto–Hades his dark home. * Demogorgon.—An infernal deity, believed to be of great power; the most frightful effects were supposed to follow from the skilled use of his name. * - | º º | | | º | | " | | º | | | | | | | | A 56. With head, hands, wings, or feet, pursues his way, And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies. Book //, lines 949, 950, Book Il-974-loo".] PARADISE LOST. 57 Lies through your spacious empire up to light, Alone, and without guide, half lost, I seek What readiest path leads where your gloomy bounds Confine with heaven; or, if some other place, From your dominion won, the ethereal King Possesses lately, thither to arrive I travel this profound; direct my course; Directed, no mean recompense it brings To your behoof, if I that region lost, All usurpation thence expelled, reduce To her original darkness, and your sway— Which is my present journey—and once more Erect the standard there of ancient Night. Yours be the advantage all, mine the revenge. Thus Satan: and him thus the Anarch old, With faltering speech and visage incomposed, Answered : I know thee, stranger, who thou art; That mighty leading Angel, who of late Made head 'gainst heaven's king, though overthrown. I saw and heard ; for such a numerous host Fled not in silence through the frighted deep, With ruin upon ruin, rout on rout, Confusion worse confounded; and heaven-gates Poured out by millions her victorious bands, Pursuing. I upon my frontiers here Keep residence; if all I can will serve That little which is left so to defend, Encroached on still through your intestine broils Weakening the sceptre of old Night. First Hell, Your dungeon, stretching far and wide beneath; Now lately heaven and earth another world, Hung o'er my realm, linked in a golden chain, To that side heaven, from whence your legions fell. If that way be your walk, you have not far; PARADISE LOST. (Book 11–1008-iowl. So much the nearer danger; go, and speed; Havoc, and spoil, and ruin, are my gain. He ceased ; and Satan stayed not to reply, But, glad that now his sea should find a shore, With fresh alacrity and force renewed, Springs upward, like a pyramid of fire, Into the wild expanse, and, through the shock Of fighting elements, on all sides round Environed, wins his way; harder beset And more endangered, than when Argo passed Through Bosphorus, betwixt the justling rocks; Or when Ulysses on the larboard shunned Charybdis, and by the other whirlpool steered. So he with difficulty and labour hard Moved on, with difficulty and labour he But he once passed, soon after, when man fell– Strange alteration —Sin and Death amain Following his track, such was the will of Heaven, Paved after him a broad and beaten way Over the dark abyss, whose boiling gulf Tamely endured a bridge of wondrous length, From hell continued, reaching the utmost orb Of this frail world : by which the spirits perverse With easy intercourse pass to and fro To tempt or punish mortals, except whom God and good Angels guard by special grace. But now at last the sacred influence Of light appears, and from the walls of heaven Shoots far into the bosom of dim Night A glimmering dawn. Here Nature first begins . Her farthest verge, and Chaos to retire, - As from her outmost works, a broken foe, With tumult less, and with less hostile din, That Satan with less toil, and now with ease Book II.-1042–1055.J PARADISE LOST. - - - 59 Waſts on the calmer wave by dubious light, And, like a weather-beaten vessel, holds Gladly the port, though shrouds and tackle torn ; Or in the emptier waste, resembling air, Weighs his spread wings, at leisure to behold Far off the empyreal heaven, extended wide In circuit, undetermined square or round, With opal towers and battlements adorned Of living sapphire, once his native seat; And fast by, hanging in a golden chain, This pendent world, in bigness as a star Of smallest magnitude, close by the moon. Thither, full fraught with mischievous revenge, Accursed, and in a cursed hour, he hies. BOOK III. God, sitting on His throne, sees Satan flying towards this world, then newly created: shows him to the Son, who sat at His right hand ; foretells the success of Satan in perverting mankind; clears His own justice and wisdom from all imputation, having created man free, and able enough to have withstood his tempter; yet declares His purpose of grace towards him, in regard he fell not of his own malice, as did Satan, but by him seduced. The Son of God renders praise to His Father for the manifestation of His gracious purpose towards man ; but God again declares that grace cannot be extended towards man without the satisfaction of Divine justice. Man hath offended the majesty of God by aspiring to Godhead, and, therefore, with all his progeny, devoted to death, must die, unless some one can be found sufficient to answer for his offence, and undergo his punishment. The Son of God freely offers Himself a ransom for man : The Father accepts Him, ordains His incarnation, pronounces His exaltation above all names in heaven and earth ; commands all the angels to adore Him. They obey, and by hymning to their harps in full quire, celebrate the Father and the Son. Meanwhile, Satan alights upon the bare convex of this world's outermost orb; where wandering, he first finds a place, since called the Limbo of Vanity: what persons and things fly up thither: thence comes to the gate of heaven, described ascending by stairs, and the waters above the firmament that flow about it: his passage thence to the orb of the sun; he finds there Uriel, the regent of that orb, but first changes himself into the shape of a meaner angel ; and, pretending a zealous desire to behold the new creation, and man, whom God had placed there, inquires of him the place of his habitation, and is directed : alights first on Mount Niphates. - AIL, holy Light | offspring of Heaven first-born 1 Or of the Eternal co-eternal beam, May I express thee unblamed 2 since God is light, And never but in unapproached light Dwelt from eternity, dwelt then in thee, Bright effluence of bright essence increateſ Or hear'st thou rather, pure ethereal stream, Whose fountain who shall tell ? Before the sun, Before the heavens thou wert, and at the voice Of God, as with a mantle, didst invest The rising world of waters dark and deep, Won from the void and formless infinite. Thee I revisit now with bolder wing, Escaped the Stygian pool, though long detained In that obscure sojourn, while in my flight Through utter and through middle darkness borne, With other notes than to the Orphean lyre, Offspring of Heaven first-born. —The reader will remember that Milton was a blind bard while giving us the inspirations of “Paradise Lost.” Literature has nothing more beautiful or affecting than the touching lament which here comes from the heart of the poet. Rook III.—18–47.] PARADISE LOST. f 61 I sung of Chaos and eternal Night; Taught by the heavenly muse to venture down The dark descent, and up to reascend, Though hard and rare;—thee I revisit safe, And feel thy sovereign vital lamp ; but thou. Revisit'st not these eyes, that roll in vain To find thy piercing ray, and find no dawn; So thick a drop serene hath quenched their orbs, Or dim suffusion veiled. Yet not the more Cease I to wander where the Muses haunt, Clear spring, or shady grove, or sunny hill, Smit with the love of sacred song; but chief Thee, Sion, and the flowery brooks beneath, That wash thy hallowed feet, and warbling flow, Nightly I visit: nor sometimes forget Those other two equalled with me in fate, So were I equalled with them in renown, Blind Thamyris, and blind Maeonides,' And Tiresias, and Phineus,” prophets old : Then feed on thoughts, that voluntary move Harmonious numbers; as the wakeful bird Sings darkling, and in shadiest covert hid, Tunes her nocturnal note.” Thus with the year Seasons return; but not to me returns Day, or the sweet approach of even or morn, Or sight of vernal bloom, or summer's rose, Or flocks, or herds, or human face divine; But cloud instead, and ever-during dark Surrounds me, from the cheerful ways of men Cut off, and for the book of knowledge fair * Thamyris and blind Maronides.—Thamyris was a Thracian poet, mentioned by Homer. Maeonides was a name given to Homer himself, from his father, Meon. * Tiresias and Phineus.-The first a Theban, the second a King of Arcadia, both celebrated in antiquity as men who gave prophecies in verse when blind. tº * Wocturnal note.—The nightingale. 62 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK III.-48–81. gº Presented with a universal blank Of Nature's works, to me expunged and rased, And wisdom at one entrance quite shut out. So much the rather thou, celestial light, Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers Irradiate; there plant eyes, all mist from thence Purge and disperse, that I may see and tell Of things invisible to mortal sight. - Now had the Almighty Father from above, From the pure Empyrean where he sits - High throned above all height, bent down his eye, His own works, and their works at once to view : About him all the sanctities of heaven Stood thick as stars, and from his sight received Beatitude past utterance; on his right 4. The radiant image of his glory sat, His only Son. On earth he first beheld Our two first parents, yet the only two Of mankind, in the happy garden placed, Reaping immortal fruits of joy and love, Uninterrupted joy, unrivalled love, In blissful solitude. He then surveyed Hell and the gulf between, and Satan there Coasting the wall of heaven on this side Night In the dun air sublime, and ready now To stoop with wearied wings, and willing feet, On the bare outside of this world, that seemed Firm land imbosomed, without firmament, Uncertain which, in ocean or in air. Him God beholding from his prospect high, Wherein past, present, future, he beholds, Thus to his only Son foreseeing spake: Only-begotten Son, seest thou what rage Transports our adversary? whom no bounds Book III.-82-115.] PARADISE LOST. * - 63 - Q Prescribed, no bars of Hell, nor all the chains Heaped on him there, nor yet the main abyss Wide interrupt, can hold; so bent he seems On desperate revenge, that shall redound Upon his own rebellious head. And now, Through all restraint broke loose, he wings his way Not far off heaven, in the precincts of light, Directly towards the new-created world, And man there placed, with purpose to essay If him by force he can destroy, or, worse, By some false guile pervert; and shall pervert; For man will hearken to his glozing lies, And easily transgress the sole command, Sole pledge of his obedience. So will fall He and his faithless progeny. Whose fault 2. Whose but his own 2 Ingrate, he had of me All he could have. I made him just and right, Sufficient to have stood, though free to fall. Such I created all the ethereal powers And spirits, both them who stood, and them who failed; Freely they stood who stood, and fell who fell. Not free, what proof could they have given sincere Of true allegiance, constant faith, or love, Where only what they needs must do appeared, Not what they would What praise could they receive? What pleasure I from such obedience paid 2 When will and reason—reason also is choice— Useless and vain, of freedom both despoiled, Made passive both, had served necessity, Not me 2 They therefore, as to right belonged, So were created, nor can justly accuse Their maker, or their making, or their fate, As if predestination overruled Their will, disposed by absolute decree PARADISE LOST. (Book ill-116-14, Or high foreknowledge. They themselves decreed Their own revolt, not I. If I foreknew, Foreknowledge had no influence on their fault, Which had no less proved certain unforeknown. So without least impulse or shadow of fate, Or aught by me immutably foreseen, They trespass, authors to themselves in all Both what they judge, and what they choose; for so I formed them free : and free they must remain, Till they enthrall themselves; I else must change Their nature, and revoke the high decree Unchangeable, eternal, which ordained Their freedom; they themselves ordained their fall. The first sort by their own suggestion fell, Self-tempted, self-depraved : Man falls, deceived By the other first: Man therefore shall find grace, The other mone. In mercy and justice both, Through heaven and earth, so shall my glory excel; But mercy first and last shall brightest shine. Thus while God spake, ambrosial fragrance filled All heaven, and in the blessed spirits elect Sense of new joy ineffable diffused. Beyond compare the Son of God was seen Most glorious: in him all his Father shone Substantially expressed ; and in his face Divine compassion visibly appeared, Love without end, and without measure grace, Which uttering, thus he to his Father spake: O Father, gracious was that word which closed Thy sovereign sentence, that man should find grace; For which both heaven and earth shall high extol Thy praises, with the innumerable sound Of hymns and sacred songs, wherewith thy throne Encompassed shall resound thee ever blessed. - Book III.—150-183.] PARADISE LOST. 65 For should Man finally be lost, should Man, Thy creature late so loved, thy youngest son, Fall circumvented thus by fraud, though joined With his own folly * That be from thee far, That far be from thee, Father, who art judge Of all things made, and judgest only right. Or shall the Adversary thus obtain His end, and frustrate thine? Shall he fulfil His malice, and thy goodness bring to nought; Or proud return, though to his heavier doom. Yet with revenge accomplished, and to Hell Draw after him the whole race of mankind, By him corrupted 2 Or wilt thou thyself Abolish thy creation, and unmake, For him, what for thy glory thou hast made 2 So should thy goodness and thy greatness both Be questioned and blasphemed without defence. To whom the great Creator thus replied: O Son, in whom my soul hath chief delight, Son of my bosom, Son who art alone My word, my wisdom, and effectual might, All hast thou spoken as my thoughts are, all As my eternal purpose hath decreed. Man shall not quite be lost, but saved who will; . Yet not of will in him, but grace in me Freely vouchsafed. Once more I will renew His lapsed powers, though forfeit, and enthralled By sin to foul exorbitant desires; Upheld by me, yet once more he shall stand On even ground against his mortal foe; By me upheld, that he may know how frail His fallen condition is, and to me owe All his deliverance, and to none but me. Some I have chosen of peculiar grace, 66 PARADISE LOST. - ſBook III.-184—216. IElect above the rest; so is my will : The rest shall hear me call, and oft be warned Their sinful state, and to appease betimes The incensed Deity, while offered grace Invites; for . I will clear their senses dark, What may suffice, and soften stony hearts To pray, repent, and bring obedience due. To prayer, repentance, and obedience due, Though but endeavoured with sincere intent, Mine ear shall not be slow, mine eye not shut. And I will place within them as a guide My umpire, Conscience; whom if they will hear, Light after light, well used, they shall attain, And to the end persisting, safe arrive. This my long sufferance, and my day of grace, They who neglect and scorn, shall never taste; But hard be hardened, blind be blinded more, That they may stumble on, and deeper fall; And none but such from mercy I exclude. But yet all is not done; man disobeying, Disloyal, breaks his fealty, and sins Against the high supremacy of Heaven, Affecting Godhead, and, so losing all, To expiate his treason hath nought left, But to destruction sacred and devote, He, with his whole posterity, must die. Die he or Justice must; unless for him Some other able, and as willing, pay The rigid satisfaction, death for death. Say, heavenly Powers, where shall we find such love? Which of ye will be mortal, to redeem - Man's mortal crime, and just the unjust to save 2 Dwells in all Heaven charity so dear? Sacred and devote –A phrase from the Roman law, denoting one justly exposed to death. Book III.-217–248.] • PARADISE LOST. - 67 He asked, but all the heavenly quire stood mute, And silence was in Heaven. On man's behalf Patron or intercessor none appeared, Much less than durst upon his own head draw The deadly forfeiture, and ransom set. And now without redemption all mankind Must have been lost," adjudged to Death and Hell By doom severe, had not the Son of God, In whom the fulness dwells of love divine, His dearest mediation thus renewed: Father, thy word is passed, man shall find grace; And shall grace not find means, that finds her way, The speediest of thy winged messengers, To visit all thy creatures, and to all Comes unprevented, unimplored, unsought? Happy for Man, so coming; he her aid Can never seek, once dead in sins, and lost; Atonement for himself, or offering meet, Indebted and undone, hath none to bring. Behold me, then ; me for him, life for life I offer; on me let thine anger fall; Account me Man: I for his sake will leave Thy bosom, and this glory next to Thee Freely put off, and for him lastly die & Well pleased ; on me let Death wreak all his rage; Under his gloomy power I shall not long Lie vanquished. Thou hast given me to possess Life in myself for ever; by thee I live, Though now to Death I yield, and am his due, All that of me can die. Yet, that debt paid, Thou wilt not leave me in the loathsome grave, His prey, nor suffer my unspotted-soul * All mankind must have been lost—This assumes that the human race must have been perpetuated notwithstanding the entrance of sin. But was that necessary? Was it probable f 68 PARADISE LOST. LOOK II l.—249-282. For ever with corruption there to dwell: But I shall rise victorious, and subdue My vanquisher, spoiled of his vaunted spoil; Death his death's wound shall then receive, and stoop Inglorious, of his mortal sting disarmed. I, through the ample air, in triumph high Shall lead Hell captive, maugre Hell, and show The powers of darkness bound. Thou, at the sight Pleased, out of Heaven shalt look down, and smile, While, by thee raised, I ruin all my foes, Death last, and with his carcass glut the grave; Then, with the multitude of my redeemed, Shall enter heaven, long absent, and return, Father, to see thy face, wherein no cloud Of anger shall remain, but peace assured And reconcilement; wrath shall be no more Thenceforth, but in thy presence joy entire. His words here ended, but His meek aspect Silent, yet spake, and breathed immortal love To mortal men, above which only shone Filial obedience; as a sacrifice Glad to be offered, He attends the will Of his great Father. Admiration seized All heaven, what this might mean, and whither tend Wondering; but soon the Almighty thus replied: O Thou in heaven and earth the only peace Found out for mankind under wrath ! O Thou, My soul complacence —well thou knowest how dear To me are all my works, nor man the least, Though last created; that for him I spare Thee from my bosom and right hand, to save, By losing thee awhile, the whole race lost. Thou, therefore, whom thou only canst redeem, Their nature also to thy nature ion; Book III.-283-316.] PARADISE LOST. And be thyself Man among men on earth, Made flesh, when time shall be, of virgin seed, By wondrous birth; be thou in Adam's room The head of all mankind, though Adam's son. As in him perish all men, so in thee, As from a second root, shall be restored As many as are restored, without thee none. His crime makes guilty all his sons. Thy merit, Imputed, shall absolve them who renounce Their own both righteous and unrighteous deeds, And live in thee transplanted, and from thee Receive new life. So Man, as is most just, Shall satisfy for man, be judged, and die, And dying rise, and rising with him, raise His brethren, ransomed with his own dear life. So heavenly love shall outdo hellish hate, Giving to death, and dying to redeem, So dearly to redeem, what hellish hate So easily destroyed, and still destroys In those who, when they may, accept not grace. Nor shalt thou, by descending to assume Man's nature, lessen or degrade thine own. Because thou hast, though throned in highest bliss Equal to God, and equally enjoying Godlike fruition, quitted all, to save A world from utter loss, and hast been found By merit more than birthright, Son of God, Found worthiest to be so, by being good, Far more than great or high; because in thee Love hath abounded more than * abounds, Therefore thy humiliation shall exalt With thee thy manhood also to this throne; Here shalt thou sit incarnate, here shalt reign Both God and man, Son both of God and man. 7O PARADISE LOST. [Book III.-317–35o. Anointed universal king; all power I give thee; reign for ever, and assume Thy merits; under thee, as head supreme, Thrones, Princedoms, Powers, Dominions, I reduce : All knees to thee shall bow, of them that bide In heaven, or earth, or under earth in hell. When thou, attended gloriously from heaven, Shalt in the sky appear, and from thee send The summoning Archangels to proclaim Thy dread tribunal; forthwith from all winds The living, and forthwith the cited dead Of all past ages, to the general doom Shall hasten ; such a peal shall rouse their sleep. Then, all thy saints assembled, thou shalt judge Bad men and Angels. They arraigned, shall sink Beneath thy sentence. Hell, her numbers full, Thenceforth shall be for ever shut. Meanwhile The world shall burn, and from her ashes spring New heaven and earth, wherein the just shall dwell, And, after all their tribulations long, See golden days, fruitful of golden deeds, With joy and love triumphing, and fair truth. Then thou thy regal sceptre shalt lay by, For regal sceptre then no more shall need; God shall be all in all. But, all ye gods, Adore Him, who to compass all this, dies; Adore the Son, and honour Him as Me. No sooner had the Almighty ceased, but all The multitude of angels, with a shout, Loud as from numbás'ºithout number, sweet As from blessed voices, uttering joy, heaven rung With jubilee, and loud hosannas filled The eternal regions. Lowly reverent Towards either throne they bow, and to the ground, Heaven rung With jubilee, and loud hosannas filled The eternal regions. Book ///, lines 347 349. § º *Sº É * º E- rº- Eº §§ º- Book III.-351–384.] PARADISE LOST. 71 With solemn adoration, down they cast Their crowns, inwove with amarant and gold;— Immortal amarant, a flower which once In Paradise, fast by the tree of life, Began to bloom; but soon for man's offence To heaven removed, where first it grew, there grows, And flowers aloft, shading the fount of life, But where the River of Bliss through midst of Heaven Rolls o'er Elysian flowers her amber stream ; With these, that never fade, the spirits elect Bind their resplendent locks, inwreathed with beams. Now in loose garlands thick thrown off, the bright Pavement, that like a sea of jasper shone, Impurpled with celestial roses, smiled. Then, crowned again, their golden harps they took, Harps ever tuned, that glittering by their side Like quivers hung, and with preamble sweet Of charming symphony they introduce Their sacred song, and waken raptures high : No voice exempt, no voice but well could join Melodious part, such concord is in heaven. Thee, Father, first they sung, Omnipotent, Immutable, Immortal, Infinite, Eternal King ; thee, Author of all being, Fountain of light, thyself invisible Amidst the glorious brightness, where thou sittest Throned inaccessible, but when thou shadest The full blaze of thy beams, and, through a cloud Drawn round about thee, like a radiant shrine, Dark with excessive bright thy skirts appear, Yet dazzle heaven, that brightest seraphim Approach not, but with both wings veil their eyes. Thee, next they sang, of all creation first, Begotten Son, Divine Similitude, 72 PARADISE LOST. ſl}OOK III.-385-418 In whose conspicuous countenance, without cloud Made visible, the Almighty Father shines, Whom else no creature can behold: on thee Impressed the effulgence of his glory abides, Transfused on thee his ample Spirit rests. He heaven of heavens, and all the powers therein, By thee created; and by thee threw down The aspiring dominations: thou that day Thy Father's dreadful thunder didst not spare, Nor stop thy flaming chariot-wheels, that shook Heaven's everlasting frame, while o'er the necks Thou drovest of warring angels disarrayed. Back from pursuit thy powers with loud acclaim Thee only extolled, Son of thy Father's might, To execute fierce vengeance on his foes, Not so on Man: him, through their malice fallen, Father of mercy and grace, thou didst not doom So strictly, but much more to pity incline, No sooner did thy dear and only Son Perceive thee purposed not to doom frail man So strictly, but much more to pity inclined, He, to appease thy wrath, and end the strife Of mercy and justice in thy face discerned, Regardless of the bliss wherein he sat Second to thee, offered Himself to die For man's offence. Oh, unexampled love! . Love nowhere to be found less than Divine ! Hail, Son of God, Saviour of men Thy name Shall be the copious matter of my song Henceforth, and never shall my heart thy praise Forget, nor from thy Father's praise disjoin. Thus they in heaven, above the starry sphere, Their happy hours in joy and hymning spent. Meanwhile upon the firm opacous globe Book III.-41945o.] PARADISE LOST. g 73. Of this round World, whose first convex divides The luminous inferior orbs, enclosed From Chaos, and the inroad of Darkness old, Satan alighted walks. A globe far off It seemed, now seems a boundless continent, Dark, waste, and wild, under the frown of Night Starless, exposed, and ever-threatening storms Of Chaos blustering round, inclement sky; Save on that side which, from the wall of heaven, Though distant far, some small reflection gains Of glimmering air less vexed with tempest loud. Here walked the Fiend at large in spacious field. As when a vulture, on Imaüs' bred, Whose snowy ridge the roving Tartar bounds, Dislodging from a region scarce of prey, To gorge the flesh of lambs or yearling kids, - On hills where flocks are fed, flies toward the springs Of Ganges or Hydaspes, lndian streams; But in his way lights on the barren plains Of Sericana, where Chineses drive With sails and wind their cany wagons’ light: . So, on this windy sea of land, the Fiend Walked up and down alone, bent on his prey; Alone, for other creature in this place, Living or lifeless, to be found was none; None yet, but store hereafter from the earth Up hither, like aérial vapours, flew Of all things transitory and vain, when sin With vanity had filled the works of men; Both all things vain, and all who in vain things Built their fond hopes of glory or lasting fame, Or happiness in this or the other life. - ' Inais–The snow-crowned Himalaya mountains. * Cany wagons.—Light vehicles, constructed of bamboº K 74 PARADISE LOST. [Booz III.-451–479. All who have their reward on earth, the fruits Of painful superstition and blind zeal, - Nought seeking but the praise of men, here find Fit retribution, empty as their deeds; All the unaccomplished works of Nature's hand, Abortive, monstrous, or unkindly mixed, Dissolved on earth, flee thither, and in vain, Till final dissolution, wander here; Not in the neighbouring moon, as some have dreamed; Those argent fields more likely habitants, Translated saints, or middle spirits, hold, Betwixt the angelical and human-kind.' Hither of ill-joined sons and daughters born First from the ancient world those giants came, With many a vain exploit, though then renowned; The builders next of Babel on the plain Of Sennaar,’ and still with vain design New Babels, had they wherewithal, would build : Others came single; he, who to be deemed A god, leaped fondly into AEtna flames, Empedocles;” and he who, to enjoy Plato's Elysium, leaped into the sea, Cleombrotus;" and many more too long,” Embryos, and idiots, eremites, and friars White, black, and gray, with all their trumpery. Here pilgrims roam, that strayed so far to seek In Golgotha Him dead who lives in Heaven; And they, who, to be sure of Paradise, Dying put on the weeds of Dominic, * Betwixt the angelical and humankind.—See Gen. vi. 4. * Sennaar.—Shinar, in Babylonia. * Empedocles.--A scholar of Pythagoras, who cast himself into Etna, in hope that his mysterious disappearance would lead to his being worshipped as a god. But Etna threw back the iron pattens he wore, and the end was ridicule, not worship. (Horace, De Art. Poct., v. 464.) - * Cleombrotus.-A Greek youth, so enamoured with Plato's doctrine of immortality, that he drowned himself in hope of realising it. - * Many more too long.—Too long to tell. Some suppose a line to be wanting here. º And many more too long, Embryos, and idiots, eremites, and friars. Book ///, lines 473, 474. Book III —480-513.] - PARADISE LOST. 75 Or in Franciscan think to pass disguised ; They pass the planets seven, and pass the fixed, And that crystalline sphere whose balance weighs The trepidation talked, and that first moved ; And now Saint Peter at Heaven's wicket seems To wait them with his keys, and now at foot Of Heaven's ascent they lift their feet, when, lo! A violent cross-wind from either coast Blows them transverse, ten thousand leagues awry lnto the devious air; then might ye see - Cowls, hoods, and habits, with their wearers, tossed And fluttered into rags; then relics, beads, Indulgences, dispenses, pardons, bulls, The sport of winds: all these, upwhirled aloft, Fly o'er the backside of the world far off, Into a Limbo large and broad, since called The Paradise of Fools, to few unknown Long after, now unpeopled, and untrod. All this dark globe the Fiend’ found as he passed, And long he wandered, till at last a gleam - Of dawning light turned thitherward in haste His travelled steps. Far distant he descries, Ascending by degrees magnificent Up to the wall of heaven, a structure high; At top whereof, but far more rich, appeared The work as of a kingly palace-gate, With frontispiece of diamond and gold Embellished; thick with sparkling orient gems The portal shone, inimitable on earth By model, or by shading pencil drawn. The stairs were such as whereon Jacob saw Angels ascending and descending, bands Of guardians bright, when he from Esau fled To Padan-Aram, in the field of Luz, - sº 76 PARADISE LOST. [Book III.--514-547. Dreaming by night under the open sky, And waking cried, “This is the gate of Heaven." Each stair mysteriously was meant, nor stood There always, but drawn up to Heaven sometimes Viewless; and underneath a bright sea flowed Of jasper, or of liquid pearl, whereon Who after came from earth, sailing arrived, Wafted by Angels, or flew o'er the lake Wrapped in a chariot drawn by fiery steeds. The stairs were then let down, whether to dare The Fiend by easy ascent, or aggravate His sad exclusion from the doors of bliss: Direct against which opened from beneath, Just o'er the blissful seat of Paradise, A passage down to the earth, a passage wide, Wider by far than that of after-times - Over Mount Sion, and, though that were large, Over the Promised Land, to God so dear; By which, to visit oft those happy tribes, On high behests his angels to and fro Pass frequent, and his eye with choice regard From Paneas, the fount of Jordan's flood, To Beérsaba, where the Holy Land Borders on Egypt and the Arabian shore; So wide the opening seemed, where bounds were set To darkness, such as bound the ocean wave. Satan from hence, now on the lower stair, That scaled by steps of gold to Heaven-gate, Looks down with wonder at the sudden view Of all this world at once. As when a scout, Through dark and desert ways with peril gone All night, at last by break of cheerful dawn Obtains the brow of some high-climbing hill, Which to his eye discovers unaware Book III.--548–578. PARADISE LOST. \ 77 The goodly prospect of some foreign land First seen, or some renowned metropolis, With glistering spires and pinnacles adorned, Which now the rising sun gilds with his beams; Such wonder seized, though after heaven seen, The spirit malign, but much more envy seized, At sight of all this world beheld so fair. Round he surveys—and well might, where he stood So high above the circling canopy Of night's extended shade—from eastern point Of Libra to the fleecy star that bears Andromeda' far off Atlantic seas, Beyond the horizon; then from pole to pole He views in breadth, and without longer pause Down right into the world's first region throws His flight precipitant, and winds with ease Through the pure marble air his oblique way Amongst innumerable stars, that shone Stars distant, but nigh hand seemed other worlds; Or other worlds they seemed, or happy isles, Like those Hesperian gardens famed of old, Fortunate fields, and groves, and flowery vales, Thrice-happy isles; but who dwelt happy there He stayed not to inquire. Above them all The golden sun, in splendour likest heaven, Allured his eye; thither his course he bends Through the calm firmament—but up or down, By centre or eccentric, hard to tell, Or longitude,-where the great luminary Aloof the vulgar constellations thick, That from his lordly eye keep distance due, * Andromeda.—One of the six signs of the zodiac, which are supposed for the first ‘time to hold out their lamps celestial to the gaze of the fiend. * The pure marble air.—Marble is a word from the Greek uappiaiow, and signifies to shine or glisten. The word is used by Milton, not as denoting hardness, but brightness and clearness. 78 PARADISE LOST. [Book III.-579-6io. Dispenses light from far: they, as they move Their starry dance in numbers that compute Days, months, and years, towards his all-cheering lamp Turn swift their various motions, or are turned By his magnetic beam, that gently warms The universe, and to each inward part With gentle penetration, though unseen, Shoots invisible virtue even to the deep; So wondrously was set his station bright. There lands the Fiend, a spot like which perhaps Astronomer in the sun's lucent orb - Through his glazed optic tube yet never saw. The place he found beyond expression bright, Compared with aught on earth, metal or stone; Not all parts like, but all alike informed With radiant light, as glowing iron with fire; If metal, part seemed gold, part silver clear: If stone, carbuncle most or chrysolite, Ruby or topaz, or the twelve that shone In Aaron's breastplate, and a stone besides Imagined rather oft than elsewhere seen, That stone, or like to that, which here below Philosophers in vain so long have sought, In vain, though by their powerful art they bind Volatile Hermes,' and call up unbound In various shapes old Proteus” from the sea, Drained through a limbec to his native form. What wonder then if fields and regions here Breathe forth elixir pure, and rivers run Potable gold, when with one virtuous touch The arch-chymic sun, so far from us remote, Produces, with terrestrial humour mixed, Volatile Hermes.—i.e., can make mercury or quicksilver do their will * Old Proteus.-A person who baffles his pursuers by assuming all shapes, but who is said to have been fixed in his true shape at last. So chemistry passes through changing phenomena to fixedness and certainty. Hook III.-611-643.] PARADISE LOST. 79 Here in the dark so many precious things Of colour glorious, and effect so rare 2 Here matter new to gaze the Devil met Undazzled. Far and wide his eye commands; For sight no obstacle found here, nor shade, But all sunshine, as when his beams at noon Culminate from the equator, as they now Shot upward still direct, whence no way round Shadow from body opaque can fall and the air, Nowhere so clear, sharpened his visual ray To objects distant far, whereby he soon Saw within ken a glorious angel stand, The same whom John saw also in the sun. His back was turned, but not his brightness hid; Of beaming sunny rays a golden tiar . Circled his head, nor less his locks behind Illustrious on his shoulders, fledge with wings, Lay waving round. On some great charge employed He seemed, or fixed in cogitation deep. Glad was the spirit impure, as now in hope To find who might direct his wandering flight To Paradise, the happy seat of Man, His journey's end, and our beginning woe. But first he casts' to change his proper shape, Which else might work him danger or delay. And now a stripling cherub he appears, Not of the prime, yet such as in his face Youth smiled celestial, and to every limb Suitable grace diffused, so well he feigned. Under a coronet his flowing hair In curis on either cheek played; wings he wore, Of many a coloured plume, sprinkled with gold; His habit fit for speed succinct, and held * Aſe casts.—Considers—forecasts. 8O PARADISE LOST. (Book iii-64 676 Before his decent steps a silver wand. - He drew not nigh unheard; the angel bright, Ere he drew nigh, his radiant visage turned, Admonished by his ear, and straight was known The Archangel Uriel, one of the seven Who in God's presence, nearest to his throne, Stand ready at command, and are his eyes That run through all the Heavens, or down to the Earth Bear his swift errands over moist and dry, O'er sea and land: him Satan thus accosts: Uriel, for thou of those seven spirits that stand In sight of God's high throne, gloriously bright, The first art wont his great authentic will Interpreter through highest heaven to bring, Where all his sons thy embassy attend; And here art likeliest by supreme decree Like honour to obtain, and as his eye' To visit oft this new creation round; Unspeakable desire to see, and know All these his wondrous works, but chiefly Man, His chief delight and favour, him for whom All these his works so wondrous he ordained, Hath brought me from the quires of cherubim Alone thus wandering. Brightest seraph, tell In which of all these shining orbs hath Man His fixed seat, or fixed seat hath none, But all these shining orbs his choice to dwell; That I may find him, and with secret gaze, Or open admiration, him behold, On whom the great Creator hath bestowed Worlds, and on whom hath all these graces poured; That both in him and all things, as is meet, The universal Maker we may praise, * As his eye.—As being his eye. Book III.-677–710.] PARADISE LOST. 81 Who justly hath driven out his rebel foes To deepest Hell, and, to repair that loss, Created this new happy race of men To serve him better: wise are all his ways. So spake the false dissembler unperceived; For neither man nor angel can discern t Hypocrisy, the only evil that walks Invisible, except to God alone, By his permissive will, through heaven and earth. And oft, though wisdom wake, suspicion sleeps At wisdom's gate, and to simplicity . Resigns her charge, while goodness thinks no ill Where no ill seems : which now for once beguiled Uriel, though regent of the sun, and held The sharpest-sighted spirit of all in Heaven; Who to the fraudulent impostor foul, In his uprightness, answer thus returned: Fair angel, thy desire, which tends to know The works of God, thereby to glorify The great Work-Master, leads to no excess That reaches blame, but rather merits praise The more it seems excess, that led thee hither From thy empyreal mansion thus alone, sº To witness with thine eyes what some perhaps, Contented with report, hear only in heaven: For wonderful indeed are all His works, Pleasant to know, and worthiest to be all Had in remembrance always with delight: But what created mind can comprehend Their number, or the wisdom infinite That brought them forth, but hid their causes deep. I saw, when at His word the formless mass, This world's material mould, came to a heap: Confusion heard His voice and wild uproar 82 - PARADISE LOST. [Book iii-vii-zaa Stood ruled, stood vast infinitude confined; Till at his second bidding darkness fled, Light shone, and order from disorder sprung. Swift to their several quarters hasted then The cumbrous elements, earth, flood, air, fire; And this ethereal quintessence of heaven Flew upward, spirited with various forms, That rolled orbicular, and turned to stars Numberless, as thou seest, and how they move. Each had his place appointed, each his course; The rest in circuit walls this universe. - Look downward on that globe, whose hither side With light from hence, though but reflected, shines; That place is Earth, the seat of Man ; that light His day, which else, as the other hemisphere, Night would invade; but there the neighbouring moon.-- So call that opposite fair star—her aid - Timely interposes, and her monthly round Still ending, still renewing, through mid heaven, With borrowed light her countenance triform Hence fills and empties to enlighten the earth, And in her pale dominion checks the night. That spot to which I point is Paradise, Adam's abode ; those lofty shades, his bower. Thy way thou canst not miss, me mine requires. Thus said, he turned ; and Satan, bowing low, As to superior spirits is wont in heaven, Where honour due and reverence none neglects, Took leave, and towards the coast of Earth beneath, Down from the ecliptic, sped with hoped success, Throws his steep flight in many an aéry wheel, Nor stayed, till on Niphates' top he lights." * On Niphates' top he lights.-A mountain in Armenia, near which Milton places Paradise. Towards the coast of Earth beneath, Down from the ecliptic, sped with hoped success, Throws his steep flight in many an aery wheel. Book ///, lines 739–741. SN!!! | -- of: BOOK IV. SATAN, now in prospect of Eden, and nigh the place where he must now attempt the bold enterprise which he undertook alone against God and man, falls into many doubts with himself, and many passions, fear, envy, and despair; but at length confirms himself in evil, journeys on to Paradise, whose outward prospect and situation is described ; over- leaps the bounds; sits in the shape of a cormorant on the tree of life, as the highest in the garden, to look about him. The garden described; Satan's first sight of Adam and Eve; his wonder at their excellent form and happy state, but with resolution to work their fall ; overhears their discourse, thence gathers that the tree of knowledge was forbidden them to eat of, under penalty of death ; and thereon intends to found his temptation, by seducing them to ransgress; then leaves them awhile to know farther of their state by some other means. Meanwhile, Uriel, descending on a sunbeam, warns Gabriel, who had in charge the gate of Paradise, that some evil spirit had escaped the deep, and passed at noon by his sphere, in the shape of a good angel, down to Paradise, discovered after by his furious gestures in the Inount. Gabriel promises to find him ere morning. Night coming on, Adam and Eve discourse of going to their rest : their bower described ; their evening worship. Gabriel, drawing forth his bands of night-watch to walk the rounds of Paradise, appoints two strong angels to Adam's bower, lest the evil spirit should be there doing some harm to Adam or Eve sleeping ; there they find him at the ear of Eve, tempting her in a dream, and bring him, though unwilling, to Gabriel ; by whom questioned, he scornfully answers; prepares resistance; but, hindered by a sign from heaven, flies out of Paradise. - - H, for that warning voice, which he, who saw The Apocalypse, heard cry in heaven aloud, Then when the Dragon, put to second rout, Came furious down to be revenged on men, “Woe to the inhabitants on earth !” that now, While time was, our first parents had been warned . The coming of their secret foe, and 'scaped, Haply so 'scaped his mortal snare. For now Satan, now first inflamed with rage, came down, The tempter ere the accuser' of mankind, To wreak on innocent frail man his loss Of that first battle, and his flight to Hell. Yet not rejoicing in his speed, though bold Far off and fearless, nor with cause to boast, Begins his dire attempt; which, nigh the birth Now rolling, boils in his tumultuous breast, And like a devilish engine back recoils Upon himself. Horror and doubt distract * Accuser.—AtagoNoc—hence devil. PARADISE LOST. - [Book IV.-19-52. His troubled thoughts, and from the bottom stir The hell within him; for within him hell He brings, and round about him, nor from hell One step, no more than from himself, can fly By change of place. Now conscience wakes despair That slumbered; wakes the bitter memory Of what he was, what is, and what must be— Worse; of worse deeds worse sufferings must ensue. Sometimes towards Eden, which now in his view Lay pleasant, his grieved look he fixes sad; - Sometimes towards heaven and the full-blazing sun, Which now sat high in his meridian tower; Then, much revolving, thus in sighs began: O thou, that, with surpassing glory crowned, Look'st from thy sole dominion, like the God Of this new world; at whose sight all the stars Hide their diminished heads; to thee I call, But with no friendly voice, and add thy name, O sun to tell thee how I hate thy beams, That bring to my remembrance from what state I fell, how glorious once above thy sphere; Till pride and worse ambition threw me down, Warring in heaven against heaven's matchless King: Ah, wherefore ? He deserved no such return From me, whom he created what I was In that bright eminence, and with his good Upbraided none; nor was his service hard. What could be less than to afford Him praise, The easiest recompense, and pay Him thanks 2 How due ! Yet all his good proved ill in me, And wrought but malice. Liſted up so high I 'sqained subjection, and thought one step higher Would set me highest, and in a moment quit The debt immense of endless gratitude, Ź.Ź. ·% ſ/% % Źź Zae, % % § ,…………… §§§ § ·}…§§ Sº %%%%%) ///////% %% ||||||||||| ſ. ſ/ | | \\|\\}\\ \ſ\\\\ ¡} \}\\ }|× W Me miserable ! which way shall I fly ir P finite despai 11m - and Infinite wrath 74. V., lines 73, Aook ſ Book IV.-53–86.] PARADISE LOST. 85 So burdensome; still paying, still to owe; Forgetful what from Him I still received, " And understood not that a grateful mind By owing owes not, but still pays, at once Indebted and discharged; what burden then P Oh, had his powerful destiny ordained Me some inferior Angel, I had stood Then happy; no unbounded hope had raised Ambition. Yet why not? some other Power As great might have aspired, and me, though mean, Drawn to his part. But other powers as great Fell not, but stand unshaken, from within Or from without, to all temptations armed. Hadst thou the same free will and power to stand 2 Thou hadst: whom hast thou then or what to accuse, But Heaven's free love dealt equally to all 2 - Be then his love accursed, since love or hate To me alike it deals eternal woe. Nay, cursed be thou; since against His thy will Chose freely what it now so justly rues. Me miserable ! which way shall I fly Infinite wrath, and infinite despair Which way I fly is Hell; myself am Hell; And, in the lowest deep, a lower deep Still threatening to devour me opens wide, To which the hell I suffer seems a heaven. Oh, then, at last relent. Is there no place Left for repentance, none for pardon left None left but by submission; and that word Disdain forbids me, and my dread of shame Among the spirits beneath, whom I seduced With other promises and other vaunts - Than to submit, boasting I could subdue The Omnipotent. Ah me ! they little know 86 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK IV.-87-12o How dearly I abide that boast so vain, Under what torments inwardly I groan. While they adore me on the throne of hell, With diadem and sceptre high advanced, The lower still I fall, only supreme In misery: such joy ambition finds. But say I could repent, and could obtain, By act of grace, my former state ; how soon Would height recall high thoughts, how soon unsay What feigned submission swore | Ease would recant Vows made in pain, as violent and void : For never can true reconcilement grow Where wounds of deadly hate have pierced so deep : Which would but lead me to a worse relapse, And heavier fall: so should I purchase dear Short intermission, bought with double smart. This knows my Punisher; therefore as far From granting He, as I from begging, peace: All hope excluded thus, behold, instead Of us, outcast, exiled, his new delight, Mankind, created, and for him this world. So farewell hope; and with hope farewell fear; Farewell remorse: all good to me is lost. Evil, be thou my good : by thee at least Divided empire with heaven's king I hold, By thee, and more than half perhaps will reign, As man ere long, and this new world shall know. Thus while he spake, each passion dimmed his face, Thrice changed with pale, ire, envy, and despair; Which marred his borrowed visage, and betrayed Him counterfeit, if any eye beheld : For heavenly minds from such distempers foul Are ever clear. Whereof he soon aware, Each perturbation smoothed with outward calm, Book iv.–121-154] PARADISE LOST. - - 87 Artificer of fraud; and was the first That practised falsehood under saintly show, Deep malice to conceal, couched with revenge. Yet not enough had practised to deceive Uriel, once warned ; whose eye pursued him down The way he went, and on the Assyrian mount - Saw him disfigured, more than could befall Spirit of happy sort: his gestures fierce He marked, and mad demeanour, then alone As he supposed, all unobserved, unseen. So on he fares, and to the border comes Of Eden, where delicious Paradise, Now nearer, crowns with her enclosure green, As with a rural mound, the champaign head Of a steep wilderness, whose hairy sides With thicket overgrown, grotesque and wild, Access denied; and overhead up grew * Insuperable height of loftiest shade, Cedar, and pine, and fir, and branching palm, A sylvan scene; and, as the ranks ascend Shade above shade, a woody theatre Of stateliest view. Yet higher than their tops The verdurous wall of Paradise up-sprung; Which to our general sire gave prospect large Into his nether empire neighbouring round. And higher than that wall a circling row Of goodliest trees, loaden with fairest fruit, Blossoms and fruits at once, of golden hue, Appeared, with gay enamelled colours mixed; On which the sun more glad impressed his beams, Than in fair evening cloud, or humid bow, - When God hath showered the earth: so lovely seemed That landscape; and of pure now purer air Meets his approach, and to the heart inspires 88 PARADISE LOST. [Book iv.–155-1ss. Vernal delight and joy, able to drive All sadness but despair. Now gentle gales, Fanning their odoriferous wings, dispense Native perfumes, and whisper whence they stole Those balmy spoils. As when to them who sail Beyond the Cape of Hope, and now are past Mozambic, off at sea north-east winds blow Sabean odours from the spicy shore Of Araby the Blest; with such delay Well pleased they slack their course, and many a league Cheered with the grateful smell, old Ocean smiles. So entertained those odorous sweets the Fiend, Who came their bane: though with them better pleased Than Asmodéus with the fishy fume That drove him, though enamoured, from the spouse Of Tobit's son,” and with a vengeance sent From Media post to Egypt, there fast bound. Now to the ascent of that steep savage hill Satan hath journeyed on, pensive and slow; But further way found none, so thick entwined, As one continued brake, the undergrowth Of shrubs and tangling bushes had perplexed All path of man or beast that passed that way. One gate there only was, and that looked east On the other side, which when the arch-felon saw, Due entrance he disdained, and, in contempt, At one slight bound high overleaped all bound Of hill or highest wall, and sheer within Lights on his feet. As when a prowling wolf, Whom hunger drives to seek new haunt for prey, Watching where shepherds pen their flocks at eve • Who came their bane.—These odours floating from the spice islands, far upon the evening or morning breeze, were known to the ancients, and are better known to the moderns. * Of Tobit’s son.—Objection is justly taken to this use of the Apocrypha legend. It degrades, in place of adorning the subject. Ē p. 88. Now to the ascent of that steep savage hill Satan hath ive and slow 'd on, pens Journey Book IV., lines 172,173. * /t º F ſcº * Book IV.-186-219.] PARADISE LOST. 89 In hurdled cotes amid the field secure, Leaps o'er the fence with ease into the fold: Or as a thief bent to unhoard the cash Of some rich burgher, whose substantial doors, Cross-barred and bolted fast, fear no assault, In at the window climbs, or o'er the tiles: So clomb this first grand thief into God's fold; So since into his church lewd hirelings climb. Thence up he flew, and on the tree of life, The middle tree and highest there that grew, Sat like a cormorant; yet not true life Thereby regained, but sat devising death . To them who lived; nor on the virtue thought Of that life-giving plant, but only used For prospect, what, well used, had been the pledge Of immortality. So little knows - Any, but God alone, to value right The good before him, but perverts best things To worst abuse, or to their meanest use. Beneath him with new wonder now he views, To all delight of human sense exposed, In narrow room, nature's whole wealth, yea more, A heaven on earth: for blissful Paradise Of God the garden was, by him in the east Of Eden planted. Eden stretched her line From Auran eastward to the royal towers Of great Seleucia, built by Grecian kings; Or where the sons of Eden long before Dwelt in Telassar. In this pleasant soil His far more pleasant garden God ordained. Out of the fertile ground he caused to grow All trees of noblest kind for sight, smell, taste; And all amid them stood the tree of life, High eminent, blooming ambrosial fruit PARADISE LOST. ſBook IV.-220–251 Of vegetable gold; and next to life, - Our death, the Tree of Knowledge, grew fast by, Knowledge of good, bought dear by knowing ill. Southward through Eden went a river large, Nor changed his course, but through the shaggy hill Passed underneath ingulfed ; for God had thrown That mountain as his garden mould, high raised Upon the rapid current, which through veins Of porous earth with kindly thirst up-drawn, Rose a fresh fountain, and with many, a rill Watered the garden; thence united fell Down the steep glade, and met the nether flood, Which from his darksome passage now appears; And now, divided into four main streams, Runs diverse, wandering many a famous realm And country, whereof here needs no account; But rather to tell how, if art could tell, How from that sapphire fount the crispèd brooks, Rolling on orient pearl and sands of gold, With mazy error under pendent shades Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice art In beds and curious knots, but nature boon Poured forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain, Both where the morning sun first warmly smote The open field, and where the unpierced shade - Imbrowned the noontide bowers. Thus was this place A happy rural seat of various view; - Groves whose rich trees wept odorous gums and balm; Others whose fruit, burnished with golden rind, Hung amiable," Hesperian fables true, - If true, here only, and of delicious taste. * Amiable.—Lovely, so as to call forth affection, desire. º - º | | º | | | º | | | \ | | º | | | | | A happy rural seat of various view. Book / V., lize 247 º Book IV.-252-28o.] PARADISE LOST. 9 | Betwixt them lawns, or level downs, and flocks Grazing the tender herb, were interposed; Or palmy hillock, or the flowery lap Of some irriguous valley spread her store, Flowers of all hue, and without thorn the rose. Another side, umbrageous grots and caves Of cool recess, o'er which the mantling vine Lays forth her purple grape, and gently creeps Luxuriant. Meanwhile murmuring waters fall Down the slope hills, dispersed, or in a lake, That to the fringed bank with myrtle crowned Her crystal mirror holds, unite their streams. The birds their quire apply; airs, vernal airs, Breathing the smell of field and grove, attune The trembling leaves, while universal Pan,' Knit with the Graces and the Hours” in dance, Led on the Eternal Spring. Not that fair field Of Enna, where Prosérpine” gathering flowers, Herself a fairer flower, by gloomy Dist Was gathered, which cost Ceres all that pain To seek her through the world; nor that sweet grove Of Daphne by Orontes, and the inspired Castilian spring, might with this Paradise Of Eden strive; nor that Nyseian isle; Girt with the river Triton, where old Cham, Whom Gentiles. Ammon call and Lybian Jove, Hid Amalthea, and her florid son, Young Bacchus from his stepdame Rhea's eye: Nor where Abassin kings” their issue guard, Universal Pah.—IIāv, all. The symbol with the ancients of all nature—the universe. . * The Graces and the Hours.-Female divinities, accepted as emblems of the beauty, joy, and harmony of the seasons, especially of the spring. * Proserpine has the accent here on the second syllable, as in the Latin. * Gloomy Dis.—Pluto. * Myseian isle.—Enna, the grave of Daphne, and the Nyseian isle, were aii places celebrated for their beauty by the Greek and Roman poets. * A bassin kings.-Abyssinian. . 92 PARADISE LOST. . [Book IV.-281-312 Mount Amara,' though this by some supposed True Paradise, under the Ethiop line By Nilus's head, enclosed with shining rock, A whole day's journey high, but wide remote From this Assyrian garden, where the Fiend Saw, undelighted, all delight, all kind Of living creatures, new to sight and strange. Two of far nobler shape, erect and tall, Godlike erect, with native honour clad, In naked majesty seemed lords of all, And worthy seemed : for in their looks divine The image of their glorious Maker shone, Truth, wisdom, sanctitude severe and pure, Severe, but in true filial freedom placed, Whence true authority in men; though both Not equal, as their sex not equal seemed ; For contemplation he, and valour formed ; For softness she, and sweet attractive grace; He for God only, she for God in him. His fair large front and eye sublime declared Absolute rule; and hyacinthine locks Round from his parted forelock manly hung Clustering, but not beneath his shoulders broad. She, as a veil, down to the slender waist Her unadornéd golden tresses wore Dishevelled, but in wanton ringlets waved, As the vine curls her tendrils, which implied Subjection, but required with gentle sway, And by her yielded, by him best received, Yielded with coy submission, modest pride, And sweet, reluctant, amorous delay. Nor those mysterious parts were then concealed, " Mount Amara—A mountain seclusion, to which some of the later emperors sent their vounger sons for education. Nº sº. T -- * Yºu", - º tº ^ - - % (, º assº N § hº - § - - Sº - N * §§§ --- \ºš) §ſº º º - w §§ ſº ºn Yº: º §§ º §§ º º & \; $4 º ºſºft/ºš §§§ ſº w ºfºº Yº, *Sºº- --- A. 92. The savoury pulp they chew, and in the rind, Still as they thirsted, scoop the brimming stream. Book / V., lines 335, 336. Book IV.-313–346.] PARADISE LOST. 93 Then was not guilty shame. Dishonest shame Of nature's works, honour dishonourable, Sin-bred, how have ye troubled all mankind With shows instead, mere shows of seeming pure, And banished from man's life his happiest life, Simplicity and spotless innocence | So passed they naked on, nor shunned the sight Of God or angel; for they thought no ill: So hand in hand they passed, the loveliest pair That ever since in love's embraces met; Adam the goodliest Man of Men since born His sons, the fairest of her daughters Eve. Under a tuft of shade that on a green Stood whispering soft, by a fresh fountain side They sat them down; and, after no more toil Of their sweet gardening labour than sufficed To recommend cool zephyr, and made ease More easy, wholesome thirst and appetite More grateful, to their supper-fruits they fell, Nectarine fruits, which the compliant boughs Yielded them, sidelong as they sat reclined On the soft downy bank damasked with flowers: The savoury pulp they chew, and in the rind, Still as they thirsted, scoop the brimming stream; Nor gentle purpose, nor endearing smiles, Wanted, nor youthful dalliance, as beseems Fair couple, linked in happy nuptial league, Alone as they. About them frisking played All beasts of the earth, since wild, and of all chase In wood or wilderness, forest or den; Sporting the lion ramped, and in his paw Dandled the kid; bears, tigers, ounces, pards, Gambolled before them; the unwieldly elephant, To make them mirth, used all his might, and wreathed 94. PARADISE LOST. [Book iv.–347–380. His lithe proboscis; close the serpent sly, Insinuating, wove with Gordian twine His braided train, and of his fatal guile Gave proof unheeded; others on the grass Couched, and, now filled with pasture, gazing sat, Or bedward ruminating; for the sun, Declined, was hasting now with prone career To the ocean isles, and in the ascending scale Of heaven the stars that usher evening rose; When Satan, still in gaze, as first he stood, Scarce thus at length failed speech recovered sad:— O Hell! what do mine eyes with grief behold 2 Into our room of bliss thus high advanced Creatures of other mould, earth-born perhaps, Not spirits, yet to heavenly spirits bright Little inferior; whom my thoughts pursue With wonder, and could love, so lively shines In them Divine resemblance, and such grace The hand that formed them on their shape hath poured. Ah! gentle pair, ye little think how nigh Your change approaches, when all these delights Will vanish, and deliver ye to woe: * More woe, the more your taste is now of joy; Happy, but for so happy ill secured Long to continue, and this high seat, your heaven Ill fenced for heaven to keep out such a foe As now is entered ; yet no purposed foe To you, whom I could pity thus forlorn, Though I unpitied. League with you I seek, And mutual amity, so straight, so close, That I with you must dwell, or you with me Henceforth. My dwelling haply may not please, Like this fair Paradise, your sense: yet such Accept, your Maker's work. He gave it me, Rook iv.–381–414) PARADISE LOST. 95 Which I as freely give : hell shall unfold, To entertain you two, her widest gates, And send forth all her kings; there will be room, Not like these narrow limits, to receive Your numerous offspring; if no better place, Thank him who puts me loth to this revenge On you who wrong me not, for him who wronged. And should I at your harmless innocence Melt, as I do, yet public reason just, Honour and empire, with revenge enlarged - By conquering this new world, compels me now To do what else, though damned, I should abhor. So spake the Fiend, and with necessity, The tyrant's plea, excused his devilish deeds. Then from his lofty stand on that high tree Down he alights among the sportful herd Of those four-footed kinds, himself now one, Now other, as their shape served best his end, Nearer to view his prey, and unespied, To mark what of their state he more might learn By word or action marked. About them round A lion now he stalks with fiery glare; Then as a tiger, who by chance hath spied In some purlieu two gentle fawns at play, Straight crouches close, then rising, changes oft His couchant watch, as one who chose his ground, Whence rushing he might surest seize them both, Griped in each paw; when Adam, first of men, To first of women, Eve, thus moving speech, Turned him, all ear to hear new utterance flow: Sole partner, and sole part of all these joys, Dearer thyself than all; needs must the Power That made us, and for us this ample world, Be infinitely good, and of his good PARADISE LOST. [Book IV-415-448. As liberal, and free as infinite; That raised us from the dust, and placed us here In all this happiness; who at his hand Have nothing merited, nor can perform Aught whereof he hath need ; he who requires From us no other service than to keep This one, this easy charge —of all the trees In Paradise that bear delicious fruit So various, not to taste that only Tree - Of Knowledge, planted by the tree of Life; So near grows death to life, whate'er death is, Some dreadful thing no doubt; for well thou know'st God hath pronounced it death to taste that tree, The only sign of our obedience left Among so many signs of power and rule Conferred upon us, and dominion given Over all other creatures that possess Earth, air, and sea. Then let us not think hard One easy prohibition, who enjoy ſº Free leave so large to all things else, and choice Unlimited of manifold delights; But let us ever praise Him, and extol His bounty; following our delightful task, To prune these growing plants, and tend these flowers, Which were it toilsome, yet with thee were sweet. To whom thus Eve replied : O thou, for whom, And from whom, I was formed, flesh of thy flesh, And without whom am to no end, my guide And head what thou hast said is just and right. For we to Him indeed all praises owe, And daily thanks; I chiefly, who enjoy So far the happier lot, enjoying thee Pre-eminent by so much odds, while thou Like consort to thyself canst nowhere find. Book IV.-449–482.] PARADISE LOST. * 97 That day I oft remember, when from sleep I first awaked, and found myself reposed, Under a shade, on flowers, much wondering where And what I was, whence thither brought, and how. Not distant far from thence a murmuring sound Of waters issued from a cave, and spread Into a liquid plain, then stood unmoved, - Pure as the expanse of heaven. I thither went, With unexperienced thought, and laid me down On the green bank, to look into the clear Smooth lake, that to me seemed another sky. As I bent down to look, just opposite A shape within the watery gleam appeared, Bending to look on me: I started back, It started back; but pleased I soon returned, Pleased it returned as soon with answering looks Of sympathy and love. There I had fixed Mine eyes till now, and pined with vain desire, Had not a voice thus warned me: What thou seest, What there thou seest, fair creature, is thyself ; With thee it came and goes. But follow me, And I will bring thee where no shadow stays Thy coming, and thy soft embraces; he Whose image thou art, him thou shalt enjoy Inseparably thine, to him shalt bear Multitudes like thyself, and thence be called Mother of human race. What could I do, But follow straight, invisibly thus led 2 Till I espied thee, fair indeed, and tall, Under a plantane, yet methought less fair, Less winning soft, less amiably mild, t Than that smooth watery image. Back I turned. Thou, following, criedst aloud, Return, fair Eve; Whom flyest thou ? whom thou flyest, of him thou art. N 98 PARADISE LOST. ſBook iv.–483-56. His flesh, his bone; to give thee being I lent Out of my side to thee, nearest my heart, Substantial life, to have thee by my side Henceforth an individual solace dear; Part of my soul, I seek thee, and thee claim, My other half. With that thy gentle hand Seized mine: I yielded ; and from that time see How beauty is excelled by manly grace, And wisdom, which alone is truly fair. So spake our general mother; and with eyes Of conjugal attraction unreproved, And meek surrender, half-embracing leaned On our first father; half her swelling breast Naked met his, under the flowing gold Of her loose tresses hid: he in delight Both of her beauty and submissive charms, Smiled with superior love, as Jupiter On Juno smiles, when he impregns the clouds That shed May flowers; and pressed her matron lip With kisses pure. Aside the Devil turned For envy; yet with jealous leer malign Eyed them askance, and to himself thus plained : Sight hateful, sight tormenting ! thus these two, Imparadised in one another's arms, The happier Eden, shall enjoy their fill Of bliss on bliss ; while I to Hell am thrust, Where neither joy nor love, but fierce desire, Among our other torments not the least, Still unfulfilled, with pain of longing pines. Yet let me not forget what I have gained From their own mouths. All is not theirs, it seems One fatal tree there stands, of Knowledge called, Forbidden them to taste. Knowledge forbidden Suspicious, reasonless. Why should their Lord Book iv.–517-550.] PARADISE LOST. 99 Envy them that ? Can it be sin to know? Can it be death And do they only stand By ignorance 2 Is that their happy state, The proof of their obedience and their faith ? O fair foundation laid whereon to build Their ruin | Hence I will excite their minds With more desire to know, and to reject Envious commands, invented with design To keep them low, whom knowledge might exalt Equal with gods. Aspiring to be such, . They taste and die; what likelier can ensue? But first with narrow search I must walk round This garden, and no corner leave unspied. A chance but chance may lead where I may meet Some wandering spirit of heaven by fountain side, Or in thick shade retired, from him to draw What further would be learned. Live while ye may, Yet happy pair; enjoy, till I return, - Short pleasures; for long woes are to succeed. So saying, his proud step he scornful turned, But with sly circumspection, and began Through wood, through waste, o'er hill, o'er dale, his roam. Meanwhile, in utmost longitude, where heaven With earth and ocean meets, the setting sun Slowly descended, and with right aspect Against the eastern gate of Paradise & Levelled his evening rays. It was a rock Of alabaster, piled up to the clouds, Conspicuous far, winding with one ascent Accessible from earth, one entrance high; The rest was craggy cliff, that overhung Still as it rose, impossible to climb. Betwixt these rocky pillars Gabriel sat, Chief of the angelic guards, awaiting night. | OO PARADISE LOST. ſBook IV.-551–584. About him exercised heroic games The unarmed youth of Heaven, but nigh at hand Celestial armoury, shields, helms, and spears, Hung high, with diamond flaming, and with gold. Thither came Uriel, gliding through the even - On a sunbeam, swift as a shooting star In autumn, 'thwart the night, when vapours fired Impress the air, and show the mariner From what point of his compass to beware Impetuous winds: he thus began in haste: Gabriel, to thee thy course by lot hath given Charge and strict watch, that to this happy place No evil thing approach or enter in. This day at height of noon came to my sphere A spirit, zealous, as he seemed, to know More of the Almighty's works, and chiefly man, God's latest image. I described his way Bent all on speed, and marked his aéry gait; But in the mount that lies from Eden north, Where he first lighted, soon discerned his looks Alien from Heaven, with passions foul obscured. Mine eye pursued him still, but under shade Lost sight of him. One of the banished crew, I fear, hath ventured from the deep to raise New troubles; him thy care must be to find. To whom the winged warrior thus returned : Uriel, no wonder if thy perfect sight, . Amid the sun's bright circle where thou sitt'st, See far and wide. In at this gate none pass The vigilance here placed, but such as come Well known from Heaven, and since meridian hour No creature thence. If spirit of other sort, So minded, have o'erleaped these earthly bounds On purpose, hard thou knowest it to exclude \\\\\\\\\\\ \!\!\!\, \\\,\! \\ \!\, : \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\}\\, \\\ №. │ │ │ │ \, ! |- , \\ \, |× , №. |(/. |-%// // ://Ø Sº S. - - Sº º - --~. s % % , ; and Uriel to h A. roo. / harge 1S C ised he So prom Returned ines 589, 590. Aook / V., Book IV.-585–615.] PARADISE LOST. . I O | Spiritual substance with corporeal bar. But if º the circuit of these walks, In whatsoever shape he lurk, of whom Thou tellest, by morrow dawning I shall know. So promised he ; and Uriel to his charge Returned on that bright beam, whose point now raised Bore him slope downward to the sun, now fallen Beneath the Azores;" whither the bright orb, Incredible how swift, had thither rolled Diurnal, or this less voluble earth, By shorter flight to the east, had left him there Arraying with reflected purple and gold The clouds that on his western throne attend.” Now came still evening on, and twilight grey Had in her sober livery all things clad ; Silence accompanied; for beast and bird, They to their grassy couch, these to their nests Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale, She all night long her amorous descant sung ; Silence was pleased. Now glowed the firmament With living sapphires: Hesperus, that led The starry host, rode brightest; till the moon, Rising in clouded majesty, at length, Apparent queen, unveiled her peerless light, And o'er the dark her silver mantle threw. When Adam thus to Eve: Fair consort, the hour Of night, and all things now retired to rest, Mind us of like repose; since God hath set Labour and rest, as day and night, to men Successive; and the timely dew of sleep, Now falling with soft slumbrous weight, inclines smm sºmsºs- . . " A sores.-Islands in the Western Ocean, which are sometimes confounded with the Canaries. They were duc west from the seat of Paradise. - - * His western throne attend.--It is observable that Milton will not here say whether the Ptolemaic or the Copernican system is the true one. io2 PARADISE LOST. [Book iv.–616-647. Our eye-lids. Other creatures all day long Rove idle, unemployed, and less need rest, Man hath his daily work of body or mind Appointed, which declares his dignity, And the regard of Heaven on all his ways: While other animals unactive range, And of their doings God takes no account. To-morrow, ere fresh morning streak the east With first approach of light, we must be risen, And at our pleasant labour, to reform Yon flowery arbours, yonder alleys green, Our walk at noon, with branches overgrown, That mock our scant manuring,' and require More hands than ours to lop their wanton growth; Those blossoms also, and those dropping gums, That lie bestrewn, unsightly and unsmooth, Ask riddance, if we mean to tread with ease; Meanwhile, as Nature wills, night bids us rest. To whom thus Eve, with perfect beauty 'dorned : My author and disposer, what thou bidd'st Unargued I obey; so God ordains: God is thy law, thou mine: to know no more Is woman's happiest knowledge, and her praise. With thee conversing, I forgot all time; All seasons, and their change, all please alike. Sweet is the breath of morn, her rising sweet, With charm of earliest birds; pleasant the sun, When first on this delightful land he spreads His orient beams, on herb, tree, fruit, and flower, Glistering with dew ; fragrant the fertile earth After soft showers; and sweet the coming on Of grateful evening mild; then silent night, * Our manuring.—Our culture. “The manuring hand of the tiller shall root out all that burdens the soil.”—Reason. of Church Government. Book iv.–648–681.1 PARADISE LOST. - 103 With this her solemn bird, and this fair moon, And these the gems of heaven, her starry train: But neither breath of morn, when she ascends With charm of earliest birds; nor rising sun On this delightful land ; nor herb, fruit, flower, Glistering with dew ; nor fragrance after showers, Nor grateful evening mild ; nor silent night, With this her solemn bird; nor walk by moon, Or glittering starlight, without thee is sweet. But wherefore all night long shine these ? for whom This glorious sight, when sleep hath shut all eyes? To whom our general ancestor replied: Daughter of God and man, accomplished Eve, These have their course to finish round the earth By morrow evening, and from land to land In order, though to nations yet unborn, Ministering light prepared, they set and rise, Lest total darkness should by night regain - Her old possession, and extinguish life In Nature and all things; which these soft fires Not only enlighten, but, with kindly heat Of various influence, foment and warm, Temper or nourish, or in part shed down Their stellar virtue on all kinds that grow On Earth, made hereby apter to receive Perfection from the sun's more potent ray. These then, though unbeheld in deep of night, Shine not in vain. Nor think, though men were none, That heaven would want spectators, God want praise. Millions of spiritual creatures walk the Earth Unseen, both when we wake, and when we sleep. All these with ceaseless praise His works behold Both day and night. How often from the steep Of echoing hill or thicket have we heard IO4 PARADISE LOST. (Book iv.–682-715. Celestial voices to the midnight air, Sole, or responsive each to other's note, Singing their great Creator | Oft in bands While they keep watch, or nightly rounding walk, With heavenly touch of instrumental sounds In full harmonic number joined, their songs Divide the night, and lift our thoughts to heaven. Thus talking, hand in hand alone they passed On to their blissful bower. It was a place Chosen by the sovereign Planter, when he framed All things to man's delightful use. The roof Of thickest covert was inwoven shade, Laurel, and myrtle, and what higher grew Of firm and fragrant leaf; on either side Acanthus, and each odorous bushy shrub, Fenced up the verdant wall; each beauteous flower, Iris all hues, roses, and jessamine, Reared high their flourished heads between, and wrought Mosaic; under foot the violet, Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich inlay Broidered the ground, more coloured than with stone Of costliest emblem : other creature here, Beast, bird, insect, or worm, durst enter none, Such was their awe of man. In shadier bower More sacred and sequestered, though but feigned, Pan or Sylvanus' never slept, nor Nymph Nor Faunus’ haunted. Here, in close recess, With flowers, garlands, and sweet-smelling herbs, Espoused Eve decked first her nuptial bed; And heavenly quires the hymenean sung, What day the genial Angel to our sire Brought her, in naked beauty more adorned, Sylvanus.-A divinity of fields and forests. *Wymph nor Faunus-Rural divinities, male and female. Book iv.–714-743] PARADISE LOST. IO5 More lovely than Pandora,' whom the gods Endowed with all their gifts; and, O! too like In sad event, when to the unwiser son Of Japhet brought by Hermes, she ensnared Mankind with her fair looks, to be avenged On him who had stole Jove's authentic fire. Thus, at their shady lodge arrived, both stood, Both turned, and under open sky adored The God that made both sky, air, earth, and heaven, Which they beheld, the moon's resplendent globe, And starry pole. Thou also mad'st the night, Maker Omnipotent, and thou the day Which we, in our appointed work employed, Have finished, happy in our mutual help And mutual love, the crown of all our bliss Ordained by thee; and this delicious place For us too large, where thy abundance wants Partakers, and uncropt falls to the ground. But thou hast promised from us two a race To fill the earth, who shall with us extol Thy goodness infinite, both when we wake, And when we seek, as now, thy gifted sleep. This said unanimous,” and other rites Observing none, but adoration pure Which God likes best, into their inmost bower Handed they went ; and, eased the putting off These troublesome disguises which we wear, Straight side by side were laid; nor turned, I ween, Adam from his fair spouse, nor Eve the rites Mysterious of connubial love refused : * More lovely than Pandora.—The story concerning Pandora is, that Prometheus, the son of Japhet, stole fire from heaven and gave it to the earth. Jupiter, to punish the theft, sent Pandora to him, endowed by the gods with all charms, as her name imports. She was brought to him by Hermes. Prometheus was not taken by the snare; but his younger brother was, and, being curious to know the contents of a casket in Pandora's possession, caused it to be opened, from which all kinds of evil came forth. * Unanimous.—By both—with one heart. O 1 off PARADISE LOST. |Book v-7477. Whatever hypocrites austerely talk Of purity, and place, and innocence, Deſaming as impure what God declares Pure, and commands to some, leaves free to all. Our Maker bids increase; who bids abstain But our destroyer, foe to God and man 2 Hail, wedded love, mysterious law, true source Of human offspring, sole propriety In Paradise, in all things common else! By thee adulterous lust was driven from men Among the bestial herds to range; by thee, Founded in reason, loyal, just, and pure, Relations dear, and all the charities Of father, son, and brother, first were known. Far be it, that I should write thee sin or blame, Or think thee unbefitting holiest place; Perpetual fountain of domestic sweets, Whose bed is undefiled, and chaste pronounced, - Present, or past, as saints and patriarchs used. Here Love his golden shafts employs, here lights His constant lamp, and waves his purple wings, Reigns here and revels; not in the bought smile Of harlots, loveless, joyless, unendeared, Casual fruition, nor in court amours, Mixed dance, or wanton mask, or midnight ball, Or serenate, which the starved lover sings To his proud fair, best quitted with disdain. These, lulled by nightingales, embracing slept, And on their naked limbs the flowery roof Showered roses, which the morn repaired. Sleep on, Blest pair; and, O! yet happiest, if ye seek - No happier state, and know to know no more. Now had night measured with her shadowy cone Half way up hill this vast sublunar vault, A. 106. These to the bower direct In search of whom they sought. Aook / V., lines 798, 799. Book IV.-778-61.1.1 - PARADISE LOST. e IO7 And from their ivory port the cherubim, Forth issuing at the accustomed hour, stood armed To their night watches in warlike parade, - When Gabriel to his next in power thus spake: Uzziel, half these draw off, and coast the south With strictest watch ; these other wheel the north; Our circuit meets full west. As flame they part, Half wheeling to the shield, half to the spear. From these, two strong and subtle sprits he called That near him stood, and gave them thus in charge: Ithuriel and Zephon, with winged speed Search through this garden, leave unsearched no nook; But chiefly where those two fair creatures lodge, Now laid perhaps asleep, secure of harm. This evening from the sun's decline arrived Who tells of some infernal spirit seen Hitherward bent—who could have thought 2—escaped The bars of Hell, on errand bad no doubt: Such, where ye find, seize fast, and hither bring. So saying, on he led his radiant files, Dazzling the moon; these to the bower direct In search of whom they sought. Him there they found, Squat like a toad close at the ear of Eve, Assaying by his devilish art to reach The organs of her fancy, and with them forge Illusions, as he list, phantasms and dreams. Or if, inspiring venom, he might taint The animal spirits, that from pure blood arise Like gentle breaths from rivers pure, thence raise, At least, distempered, discontented thoughts, - Vain hopes, vain aims, inordinate desires, Blown up with high conceits engendering pride. Him thus intent Ithuriel with his spear Touched lightly;-for no falsehood can endure Io8 PARADISE LOST. [Book IV.-812-845. Touch of celestial temper, but returns Of force to its own likeness. Up he starts, Discovered and surprised. As when a spark Lights on a heap of nitrous powder, laid Fit for the tun, some magazine to store Against a rumoured war, the Smutty grain, With sudden blaze diffused, inflames the air; So started up in his own shape the Fiend. Back stept those two fair angels, half amazed So-sudden to behold the grizzly king. Yet thus, unmoved with fear, accost him soon : Which of those rebel spirits adjudged to hell Com'st thou, escaped thy prison 2 and transformed, Why satt'st thou like an enemy in wait, Here watching at the head of these that sleep 2 Know ye not, then, said Satan, filled with scorn. Know ye not me? Ye knew me once no mate For you, there sitting where ye durst not soar: Not to know me, argues yourselves unknown, The lowest of your throng; or, if ye know, Why ask ye, and superfluous begin Your message, like to end as much in vain? To whom thus Zephon, answering scorn with scorn: Think not, revolted spirit, thy shape the same, Or undiminished brightness to be known, As when thou stood'st in heaven, upright and pure; That glory then, when thou no more wast good, Departed from thee; and thou resemblest now Thy sin and place of doom obscure and foul. But come; for thou, be sure, shalt give account To him who sent us, whose charge is to keep This place inviolable, and these from harm. - So spake the cherub ; and his grave rebuke, Severe in youthful beauty, added grace Book IV.-846–879.] PARADISE LOST. Icy Invincible. Abashed the devil stood, And felt how awful goodness is, and saw Virtue in her shape how lovely; saw, and pined His loss; but chiefly to find here observed His lustre visibly impaired; yet seemed Undaunted. If I must contend, said he, Best with the best, the sender not the sent, Or all at once; more glory will be won, Or less be lost. Thy fear, said Zephon bold, Will save us trial what the least can do - Single against thee, wicked and thence weak. The Fiend replied not, overcome with rage; But, like a proud steed reined, went haughty on, Champing his iron curb: to strive or fly He held it vain; awe from above had quelled His heart, not else dismayed. Now drew they nigh The western point, where those half-rounding guards Just met, and, closing, stood in squadron joined, Awaiting next command. To whom their chief, Gabriel, from the front thus called aloud: O friends ! I hear the tread of nimble feet Hasting this way, and now by glimpse discern Ithuriel, and Zephon, through the shade; And with them comes a third of regal port, But faded splendour wan, who by his gait And fierce demeanour seems the prince of Hell, Not likely to part hence, without contest; Stand firm, for in his look defiance lours. He scarce had ended, when those two approached, And brief related whom they brought, where found, How busied, in what form and posture couched. To whom with stern regard thus Gabriel spake: Why hast thou, Satan, broke the bounds prescribed To thy transgressions, and disturbed the charge I IO - PARADISE LOST. [Book IV.-880–913. Of others, who approve not to transgress By thy example, but have power and right To question thy bold entrance on this place; Employed, it seems, to violate sleep, and those Whose dwelling God hath planted here in bliss 2 To whom thus Satan, with contemptuous brow: Gabriel, thou hadst in Heaven the esteem of wise, And such I held thee; but this question asked Puts me in doubt. Lives there who loves his pain 2 Who would not, finding way, break loose from hell, Though thither doomed 2 Thou wouldst thyself, no doubt. And boldly venture to whatever place Farthest from pain, where thou mightst hope to change Torment with ease, and soonest recompense e Dole with delight, which in this place I sought; To thee no reason, who knowest only good, But evil hast not tried : and wilt object His will, who bound us 2 Let him surer bar His iron gates, if he intends our stay In that dark durance. Thus much what was asked. The rest is true, they found me where they say; But that implies not violence or harm. Thus he in scorn. The warlike Angel moved, Disdainfully half smiling, thus replied: O loss of one in heaven to judge of wise! Since Satan fell, whom folly overthrew, And now returns him from his prison 'scaped, Gravely in doubt whether to hold them wise Or not, who ask what boldness brought him hither Unlicensed from his bounds in hell prescribed; So wise he judges it to fly from pain, - However, and to 'scape his punishment So judge thou still, presumptuous ! till the wrath, Which thou incurr'st by flying, meet thy flight Book IV.-914–945.] PARADISE LOST. g | 1 ſ Sevenfold, and scourge that wisdom back to hell Which taught thee yet no better, that no pain Can equal anger infinite provoked. But wherefore thou alone 2. Wherefore with thee Came not all hell broke loose 2 Is pain to them e Less pain, less to be fled; or thou than they Less hardy to endure? Courageous chief! The first in flight from pain Hadst thou alleged To thy deserted host this cause of flight, Thou surely hadst not come sole fugitive. To which the Fiend thus answered, frowning stern: Not that I less endure, or shrink from pain, e Insulting Angel! Well thou knowest I stood The fiercest, when in battle to thy aid The blasting vollied thunder made all speed, And seconded thy else not dreaded spear. But still thy words at random as before Argue thy inexperience, what behoves' From hard assays, and ill successes past, A faithful leader, not to hazard all Through ways of danger by himself untried. I therefore, I alone first undertook To wing the desolate abyss and spy This new-created world, whereof in hell Fame is not silent, here in hope to find Better abode, and my afflicted powers To settle here on earth, or in mid air; Though for possession put to try once more What thou and thy gay legions dare against; Whose easier business were to serve their Lord High up in heaven, with songs to hymn his throne, And practised distances to cringe, not fight. " Inexperience, what behoves.—As to what behoves. I 2 PARADISE LOST, - [Book IV.-946–977. To whom the warrior Angel soon replied: To say and straight unsay, pretending first Wise to fly pain, professing next the spy, Argues no leader, but a liar traced, Satan; and couldst thou faithful add 2 O name, O sacred name of faithfulness profaned Faithful to whom 2 To thy rebellious crew 2 Army of fiends, fit body to fit head. Was this your discipline and faith engaged, Your military obedience, to dissolve Allegiance to the acknowledged Power Supreme * And thou, sly hypocrite, who now wouldst seem Patron of liberty, who more than thou Once fawned, and cringed, and servilely adored Heaven's awful monarch 2 wherefore, but in hope To dispossess him, and thyself to reign 2 But mark what I areed thee' now : Avaunt Fly thither whence thou fledd'st | If from this hour Within these hallowed limits thou appear, Back to the infernal pit I drag thee chained, And seal thee so, as henceforth not to scorn The facile gates of hell too slightly barred. So threatened he ; but Satan to no threats Gave heed, but, waxing more in rage, replied : Then, when I am thy captive, talk of chains, Proud limitary cherub l’ but ere then Far heavier load thyself expect to feel From my prevailing arm, though heaven's king Ride on thy wings, and thou with thy compeers, Used to the yoke, draw'st his triumphant wheels In progress through the road of Heaven star-paved. While thus he spake, the angelic squadron bright * Areed thee.—Anglo-Saxon for counsel—admonish. * Proud limitary cherub.-One set to watch limits—to guard boundaries. Book IV.-978–1oog.] - PARADISE LOST. - I IS Turned fiery red, sharpening in mooned horns Their phalanx, and began to hem him round With ported spears, as thick as when a field Of Ceres, ripe for harvest, waving bends Her bearded grove of ears, which way the wind Sways them ; the careful ploughman doubting stands Lest on the threshing-floor his hopeful sheaves Prove chaff. On the other side, Satan, alarmed, Collecting all his might, dilated stood, Like Teneriff or Atlas, unremoved : His stature reached the sky, and on his crest Sat horror plumed; nor wanted in his grasp What seemed both spear and shield. Now dreadful deeds Might have ensued; nor only Paradise, § - - In this commotion, but the starry cope Of heaven perhaps, or all the elements At least had gone to wrack, disturbed and torn With violence of this conflict, had not soon The Eternal, to prevent such horrid fray, Hung forth in heaven his golden scales, yet seen Betwixt Astrea and the Scorpion' sign, Wherein all things created first He weighed, The pendulous round earth with balanced air In counterpoise; now ponders all events, Battles and realms: in these he put two weights, The sequel each of parting and of fight: The latter quick up flew, and kicked the beam; Which Gabriel spying, thus bespake the Fiend: Satan, I know thy strength, and thou know'st mine; Neither our own, but given; what folly then To boast what arms can do! since thine no more Than Heaven permits, nor mine, though doubled now * Betwixt Astrea and the Scorpion.—Signs in the Zodiac. I 4. PARADISE I_OST. - [Book iv.–tolo-tois. To trample thee as mire: for proof look up, And read thy lot in yon celestial sign, º Where thou art weighed, and shown how light, how weak If thou resist. The Fiend looked up, and knew His mounted scale aloft : nor more;' but fled Murmuring, and with him fled the shades of night. • Scale aloft: nor more.—Nor said ought more. p. II.4. Nor more; but fled Murmuring, and with him fled the shades of night. Aook / V., lines IoI4, IoI5. º 22 A. II.4. Leaning, half raised, with looks of cordial love, Hung over her enamoured. Aook V., ſines 12, 13. Book v. MoRNING approached, Eve relates to Adam her troublesome dream ; he likes it not, yet comforts her; they come forth to their day-labours ; their morning hymn at the door of their bower. God, to render man inexcusable, sends Raphael to admonish him of his obedience, of his free estate, of his enemy near at hand, who he is, and why his enemy, and whatever else may avail Adam to know. Raphael comes down to Paradise; his appearance described ; his coming discerned by Adam afar off, sitting at the door of his bower; he goes out to meet him, brings him to his lodge, entertains him with the choicest fruits of Paradise, got together hw Eve ; their discourse at table; Raphael performs his message, minds Adam of his state and of his enemy; relates, at Adam's request, who that enemy is, and how he came to be so, beginning from the first revolt in heaven, and the occasion thereof; how he drew his legions after him to the parts of the north, and there incited them to rebel with him, persuading all but only Abdiel, a seraph, who in argument dissuades and opposes him, then forsakes him. OW morn, her rosy steps in the eastern clime Advancing, sowed the earth with orient pearl, When Adam waked, so customed : for his sleep Was aery-light, from pure digestion bred, And temperate vapours bland, which the only sound Of leaves and fuming rills, Aurora's fan,' Lightly dispersed, and the shrill matin song Of birds on every bough; so much the more His wonder was to find unwakened Eve With tresses discomposed, and glowing cheek, As through unquiet rest. He, on his side Leaning, half raised, with looks of cordial love Hung over her enamoured, and beheld Beauty, which, whether waking or asleep, Shot forth peculiar graces; then with voice Mild as when Zephyrus on Flora breathes, Her hand soft touching, whisper'd thus:—Awake, My fairest, my espoused, my latest found, Heaven's last, best gift, my ever-new delight ! N Awake: the morning shines, and the fresh field " Aarora's ſan.—We often speak of fanning winds, and in the morning they may be described as Aurora's fan. I 16 PARADISE LOST. LBook V.-21 -54. Calls us; we lose the prime to mark how spring Our tender plants, how blows the citron grove, What drops the myrrh, and what the balmy reed, How Nature paints her colours, how the bee Sits on the bloom extracting liquid sweet. Such whispering waked her, but with startled eye On Adam, whom embracing, thus she spake — O sole in whom my thoughts find all repose, My glory, my perfection glad I see Thy face and morn returned; for I this night— Such night till this I never passed—have dreamed, If dreamed, not, as I oft am wont, of thee, Works of day past, or morrow's next design; But of offence and trouble, which my mind Knew never till this irksome night. Methought Close at mine ear one called me forth to walk With gentle voice—I thought it thine. It said, Why sleep'st thou, Eve 2 now is the pleasant time, The cool, the silent, save where silence yields To the night-warbling bird, that now awake Tunes sweetest his love-laboured song; now reigns Full-orbed the moon, and with more pleasing light Shadowy sets off the face of things—in vain, If none regard. Heaven wakes with all his eyes, Whom to behold but thee, Nature's desire? In whose sight all things joy, with ravishment Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze. I rose as at thy call, but found thee not; To find thee I directed then my walk; And on, methought, alone I passed through ways That brought me on a sudden to the tree Of interdicted knowledge. Fair it seemed, Much fairer to my fancy than by day: And, as I wondering looked, beside it stood Book V.—55–86.] PARADISE LOST. - I 1.7 One shaped and winged like one of those from heaven By us oft seen: his dewy locks distilled Ambrosia.' On that tree he also gazed; And oh, fair plant, said he, with fruit surcharged, Deigns none to ease thy load, and taste thy sweet, Nor God, nor man 2 Is knowledge so despised ? Or envy, or what reserve forbids to taste? Forbid who will, none shall from me withhold Longer thy offered good; why else set here 2 This said, he paused not, but with venturous arm He plucked, he tasted. Me damp horror chilled At such bold words, vouched with a deed so bold: But he thus, overjoyed : O fruit divine, Sweet of thyself, but much more sweet thus cropt, Forbidden here, it seems, as only fit For gods, yet able to make gods of men; And why not gods of men; since good, the more Communicated, more abundant grows, The author not impaired, but honoured more ? Here, happy creature, fair angelic Evel Partake thou also: happy though thou art, Happier thou mayst be, worthier canst not be, Taste this, and be henceforth among the gods Thyself a goddess, not to earth confined, But sometimes in the air, as we; sometimes Ascend to Heaven, by merit thine, and see What life the gods live there, and such live thou. So saying, he drew nigh, and to me held, Even to my mouth of that same fruit held part Which he had plucked: the pleasant savoury smell So quickened appetite, that I, methought, Could not but taste. Forthwith up to the clouds Ambrosia.-Grateful odour, proper to the gods. 118 PARADISE LOST. [Book V -87-12o. With him I flew, and underneath beheld The earth outstretched immense, a prospect wide And various; wondering at my flight and change To this high exaltation, suddenly My guide was gone, and I, methought, sunk down And fell asleep; but, oh, how glad I waked To find this but a dream. Thus Eve her night Related, and thus Adam answered sad: Best image of myself, and dearer half, - The trouble of thy thoughts this night in sleep Affects me equally; nor can I like . This uncouth dream, of evil sprung, I fear. Yet evil whence 2 in thee can harbour none, Created pure. But know, that in the soul Are many lesser faculties, that serve Reason as chief. Among these, Fancy next Her office holds; of all external things, Which the five watchful senses represent, She forms imaginations, aery shapes, Which reason joining or disjoining frames All what we affirm or what deny, and call Our knowledge or opinion; then retires Into her private cell, when nature rests. Oft in her absence mimic Fancy wakes . To imitate her; but misjoining shapes, Wild work produces oft, and most in dreams; Ill matching words and deeds long past or late, Some such resemblances, methinks, I find Of our last evening's talk, in this thy dream, But with addition strange; yet be not sad. Evil into the mind of God or Man May come and go, so unapproved, and leave No spot or blame behind; which gives me hope That what in sleep thou didst abhor to dream, Book V.-121 -154.] PARADISE LOST. - I 19 Waking thou never wilt consent to do. Be not disheartened, then, nor cloud those looks, That wont to be more cheerful and serene, - Than when fair morning first smiles on the world; And let us to our fresh employments rise Among the groves, the fountains, and the flowers, That open now their choicest bosomed smells, Reserved from night, and kept for thee in store. So cheered he his fair spouse, and she was cheered, But silently a gentle tear let fall * - From either eye, and wiped them with her hair; Two other precious drops that ready stood, Each in their crystal sluice, he, ere they fell, Kissed, as the gracious signs of sweet remorse And pious awe, that feared to have offended. So all was cleared, and to the field they haste. But first from under shady arborous roof, Soon as they forth were come to open sight Gf day-spring, and the sun, who, scarce uprisen, With wheels yet hovering o'er the ocean-brim, Shot parallel to the earth his dewy ray, - Discovering in wide landscape all the east Of Paradise and Eden's happy plains, Lowly they bowed adoring, and began Their orisons, each morning duly paid In various style; for neither various style Nor holy rapture wanted they to praise Their Maker, in fit strains pronounced, or sung Unmeditated; such prompt eloquence Flowed from their lips, in prose or numerous verse; More tuneable than needed lute or harp To add more sweetness; and they thus began : These are Thy glorious works, Parent of good, Almighty! Thine this universal frame, - I2O PARADISE LOST. [BOOK W.-155-184. Thus wondrous fair: Thyself how wondrous then Unspeakable, who sitt'st above these heavens To us invisible, or dimly seen In these thy lowest works; yet these declare Thy goodness beyond thought, and power divine. Speak, ye who best can tell, ye sons of light, Angels, for ye behold Him, and with songs And choral symphonies, day without night, Circle his throne rejoicing; ye in heaven, On earth join all ye creatures to extol Him first, Him last, Him midst, and without end. Fairest of stars, last in the train of night, If better thou belong not to the dawn, Sure pledge of day, that crown'st the smiling morn With thy bright circlet, praise Him in thy sphere, While day arises, that sweet hour of prime. Thou Sun, of this great world both eye and soul, Acknowledge Him thy greater; sound His praise In thy eternal course, both when thou climb'st, . And when high noon hast gained, and when thou fall'st. Moon, that now meet'st the orient sun, now fly'st, With the fixed stars, fixed in their orb that flies; And ye five other wandering fires,' that move In mystic dance not without song, resound His praise, who out of darkness called up light. Air, and ye elements, the eldest birth Of nature's womb, that in quaternion run” Perpetual circle, multiform; and mix And nourish all things; let your ceaseless change Vary to our great Maker still new praise. * And ye five other, wandering fires.—The five planets known in Milton's time—Venus, Mercury, Mars, Jupiter. and Saturn. . * That move in mystic dance.—The fitting action of things is often described as their music. Hence the wide application of the words harmony, concord, &c., derived from music. g * That in garaternion run.—A reference to the supposed four-fold influence of the first elements of things. Book v.–185–218.] PARADISE LOST. I 2 I Ye mists and exhalations, that now rise From hill or steaming lake, dusky or grey, Till the sun paint your fleecy skirts with gold, In honour to the world's great Author rise; Whether to deck with clouds the uncoloured sky, Or wet the thirsty earth with falling showers, Rising or falling, still advance His praise. . His praise, ye winds that from four quarters blow, Breathe soft or loud; and wave your tops, ye pines, With every plant, in sign of worship wave. Fountains, and ye that warble as ye flow, Melodious murmurs, warbling tune His praise. Join voices, all ye living souls: ye birds That, singing, up to Heaven-gate ascend, Bear on your wings and in your notes His praise. Ye that in waters glide, and ye that walk The earth, and stately tread, or lowly creep; Witness if I be silent, morn or even, To hill or valley, fountain or fresh shade, Made vocal by my song, and taught His praise. Hail, universal Lord! be bounteous still To give us only good; and if the night Have gathered aught of evil, or concealed, Disperse it, as now light dispels the dark. So prayed they innocent, and to their thoughts Firm peace recovered soon, and wonted calm. On to their morning's rural work they haste, Among sweet dews and flowers, where any row Of fruit-trees, over-woody, reached too far - Their pampered boughs, and needed hands to chec Fruitless embraces: or they led the vine To wed her elm ; she, spoused, about him twines Her marriageable arms, and with her brings Her dower, the adopted clusters, to adorn I PARADISE LOST. [BOOK V.-219–25o. His barren leaves. Them thus employed beheld With pity heaven's high King, and to Him called Raphael, the sociable spirit, that deigned To travel with Tobias,' and secured His marriage with the seven-times wedded maid. . Raphael, said he, thou hear'st what stir on Earth Satan, from Hell 'scaped through the darksome gulf. Hath raised in Paradise; and how disturbed This night the human pair; how he designs In them at once to ruin all mankind. Go, therefore, half this day, as friend with friend, Converse with Adam, in what bower or shade Thou find'st him from the heat of noon retired, To respite his day-labour with repast, Or with repose; and such discourse bring on As may advise him” of his happy state— Happiness in his power, left free to will, Left to his own free will, his will though free Yet mutable; whence warn him to beware He swerve not, too secure. Tell him withal His danger, and from whom ; what enemy Late fallen himself from heaven, is plotting In OW The fall of others from like state of bliss ; By violence 2 no, for that shall be withstood; But by deceit and lies. This let him know, Lest, wilfully transgressing, he pretend Surprisal, unadmonished, unforewarned. So spake the Eternal Father, and fulfilled All justice. Nor delayed the winged saint After his charge received; but from among Thousand celestial Ardours,” where he stood Veiled with his gorgeous wings, up springing light, ' To travel with Tobias.—See Book of Tobit. * As may advise him.—Make him aware of sensible to. * Celestia/ Ardours.—Seraphic powers. Book V.-251-281.] PARADISE LOST. . I 23 Flew through the midst of heaven;–the angelic quires, On each hand parting, to his speed gave way Through all the empyreal road: till, at the gate Of Heaven arrived, the gate self opened wide On golden hinges turning, as by work Divine the sov’reign Architect had framed.' From hence no cloud, or, to obstruct his sight, Star interposed, however small—he sees, Not unconform' to other shining globes, - Earth, and the garden of God, with cedars crowned Above all hills. As when by night the glass Of Galileo, less assured, observes Imagined lands and regions in the moon: Or pilot,” from amidst the Cyclades, Delos or Samos' first appearing, kens A cloudy spot. Down thither prone in flight He speeds, and through the vast ethereal sky Sails between worlds and worlds, with steady wing, Now on the polar winds, then with quick fan Winnows the buxom air ;" till, within soar Of towering eagles, to all the fowls he seems A phoenix, gazed by all, as that sole bird, When, to enshrine his relics in the Sun's Bright temple, to Egyptian Thebes he flies. At once on the eastern cliff of Paradise He lights; and to his proper shape returns, A seraph winged. Six wings he wore, to shade His lineaments divine; the pair that clad Each shoulder, broad, came mantling o'er his breast With regal ornament; the middle pair Girt like a starry zone his waist, and round * Not unconform.-Sees the earth as conformed in appearance to other globes. * Or pilot.—Used by Milton for captain or commander. * Cyclades, Delos or Samos.-Greek islands. * * Burom air.--Light, yielding. - [24 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK W.-282—311, Skirted his loins and thighs with downy gold, And colours dipt in heaven; the third his feet Shadowed from either heel with feathered mail, Sky-tinctured grain." Like Maia's son” he stood, And shook his plumes, that heavenly fragrance filled The circuit wide. Straight knew him all the bands Of Angels under watch; and to his state, And to his message high, in honour rise; For on some message high they guessed him bound. Their glittering tents he passed, and now is come Into the blissful field, through groves of myrrh, And flowering odours, cassia, mard, and balm; A wilderness of sweets; for Nature here Wantoned as in her prime, and played at will Her virgin fancies, pouring forth more sweet, Wild above rule or art, enormous bliss. Him through the spicy forest onward come Adam discerned, as in the door he sat Of his cool bower, while now the mounted sun Shot down direct his fervid rays, to warm Earth's inmost womb, more warmth than Adam needs; And Eve within, due at her hour prepared For dinner savoury fruits, of taste to please True appetite, and not disrelish thirst Of nectareous draughts between, from milky stream, Berry, or grape: to whom thus Adam called: - Haste hither, Eve, and, worth thy sight, behold, Eastward among those trees, what glorious shape Comes this way moving; seems” another morn Risen on mid-noon. Some great behest from Heaven * Feathered mail, sky-tinctured grain.—Beautiful colouring wrought in so as to be durable. “Dipt in the richest tincture of the skies.” Aope, “A'ape of the Lock,” cant. ii. * Like Maia's son.—Like Mercury. * Seems. – It seems · |-ſyvyyſ \\! | | ſºſ |ſt}| }, \\ \\ shape 1OuS what glor Eastward among those trees, I24 £ P is way moving Comes th Aook P., lines 309, 310. Book V.-312-343.] PARADISE LOST. - I 25 To us perhaps he brings, and will vouchsafe This day to be our guest. But go with speed, And, what thy stores contain, bring forth, and pour Abundance, fit to honour and receive Our heavenly stranger; well we may afford Our givers their own gifts, and large bestow From large bestowed, where Nature multiplies Her fertile growth, and by disburdening grows More fruitful, which instructs us not to spare. To whom thus Eve: Adam, earth, hallowed mould, Of God inspired ! small store will serve, where store, All seasons, ripe for use hangs on the stalk; Save what by frugal storing firmness gains To nourish, and superfluous moist consumes. But I will haste, and from each bough and brake, Each plant and juiciest gourd, will pluck such choice To entertain our Angel-guest, as he Beholding shall confess that here on earth God hath dispensed his bounties as in Heaven. So saying, with dispatchful looks, in haste She turns, on hospitable thoughts intent What choice to choose for delicacy best, What order so contrived as not to mix Tastes not well joined, inelegant, but bring Taste after taste upheld with kindliest change; Bestirs her then, and from each tender stalk Whatever Earth, all-bearing mother, yields In India East or West, or middle shore In Pontus or the Punic coast,' or where Alcinóus reigned; fruit of all kinds, in coat Rough, or smooth rind, or bearded husk, or shell, She gathers, tribute large, and on the board * Pontus or the Punic coast.—On the northern or the southern shores of the Mediterranean. * Alcindus reigned.—He reigned over Corfu, Corcyra, &c. 126 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK V.- 344-374. Heaps with unsparing hand. For drink the grape - She crushes, inoffensive must," and meaths’ From many a berry, and from sweet kernels pressed, She tempers dulcet creams; nor these to hold Wants her fit vessels pure; then strews the ground With rose and odours from the shrub unfumed. Meanwhile our primitive great sire, to meet His godlike guest, walks forth without more train Accompanied than with his own complete Perfections. In himself was all his state, More solemn than the tedious pomp that waits On princes, when their rich retinue long Of horses led, and grooms besmeared with gold, Dazzles the crowd, and sets them all agape. Nearer his presence Adam, though not awed, Yet with submiss approach and reverence meek, As to a superior nature, bowing low, Thus said: Native of Heaven, for other place None can than Heaven such glorious shape contain; Since by descending from the thrones above, Those happy places thou hast deigned a while To want, and honour these; vouchsafe with us Two only, who yet by sovereign gift possess This spacious ground, in yonder shady bower To rest, and what the garden choicest bears To sit and taste, till this meridian heat Be over, and the sun more cool decline. Whom thus the angelic Virtue answered mild: Adam, I therefore came ; nor art thou such Created, or such place hast here to dwell, As may not oft invite, though spirits of Heaven, * She crushes, incſensive must.—New wine, pressed from the grape, but not fermented. * And meaths.—Drinks. Anglo-Saxon. - * Angelic Virtue.—The Virtues were an order of their own—high in rank in the celestial hierarchy. Book v–375-406) PARADISE LOST. - - I 27 To visit thee. Lead on then where thy bower O'ershades; for these mid hours, till evening rise, I have at will. So to the sylvan lodge They came, that like Pomona's arbour smiled," With flowerets decked, and fragrant smells. But Eve, Undecked save with herself, more lovely fair Than wood-nymph, or the fairest goddess feigned Of three that in Mount Ida naked strove,” Stood to entertain her guest from heaven; no veil She needed, virtue proof; no thought infirm Altered her cheek. On whom the angel “Hail!" Bestowed, the holy salutation used Long after to blest Mary, second Eve. Hail, mother of mankind, whose fruitful womb Shall fill the world more numerous with thy sons, Than with these various fruits the trees of God Have heaped this table. Raised of grassy turf Their table was, and mossy seats had round, And on her ample square from side to side, All autumn piled, though spring and autumn here Danced hand in hand. A while discourse they hold, No fear lest dinner cool; when thus began Our author: Heavenly stranger, please to taste These bounties, which our Nourisher, from whom All perfect good, unmeasured out, descends, To us for food and for delight hath caused The Earth to yield; unsavoury food perhaps To spiritual natures; only this I know, That one celestial Father gives to all. º To whom the Angel: Therefore what He gives— Whose praise be ever sung—to man in part Spiritual, may of purest spirits be found * Like Pomona's arbour smiled.—Pomona was the goddess of fruit trees. * Of three that in Mount Ida naked strove.—Juno, Minerva, and Venus thus appealed to the judgment of Paris. 128 PARADISE LOST. [Book V.--407-438. No ungrateful food ; and food alike those pure Intelligential substances require, As doth your rational ; and both contain Within them every lower faculty Of sense, whereby they hear, see, smell, touch, taste, Tasting, concoct, digest, assimilate, And corporeal to incorporeal turn. For know, whatever was created needs To be sustained and fed : of elements The grosser feeds the purer, earth the sea, Earth and the sea feed air, the air those fires Ethereal, and as lowest, first the moon; Whence in her visage round those spots, Vapours not yet into her substance turned. Nor doth the moon no nourishment exhale From her moist continent to higher orbs. The sun, that light imparts to all, receives From all his alimental recompense In humid exhalations, and at even ~ Sups with the ocean. Though in Heaven the trees Of life ambrosial fruitage bear, and vines Yield nectar; though from off the boughs each morn, We brush mellifluous dews, and find the ground Covered with pearly grain; yet God hath here Varied his bounty so with new delights, As may compare with Heaven; and to taste Think not I shall be nice. So down they sat, And to their viands fell; nor seemingly The Angel, nor in mist—the common gloss Of theologians—but with keen despatch Of real hunger' and concoctive heat To transubstantiate : what redounds, transpires * With keen despatch of real hunger.—This seems a confounding of spirit with matter. But Milton adheres strictly to the sacred text, and there was possibly more reality under such phenomena than is dreamt of in our philosophy. Źź --~~~~ . zº To whom the winged Hierarch replied p. 128. O Adam, one Almighty is, from whom All things proceed. Book V., lines 468–47o. Book V-439–471.] - PARADISE LOST. I 29 Through spirits with ease; nor wonder, if by fire Of sooty coal the empiric alchymist - Can turn, and holds it possible to turn, Metals of drossiest ore to perfect gold, As from the mine. Meanwhile at table Eve Ministered naked, and their flowing cups With pleasant liquors crowned. O innocence, Deserving Paradise ! if ever, then, Then" had the sons of God excuse to have been Enamoured at that sight; but in those hearts - Love unlibidinous reigned, nor jealousy Was understood, the injured lover's hell. Thus when with meats and drinks they had sufficed, Not burdened nature, sudden mind arose In Adam not to let the occasion pass, Given him by this great conference, to know Of things above his world, and of their being Who dwell in heaven, whose excellence he saw Transcend his own so far: whose radiant forms, Divine effulgence, whose high power, so far Exceeded human : and his wary speech Thus to the empyreal minister he framed: Inhabitant with God, now know I well Thy favour, in this honour done to man; Under whose lowly roof thou hast vouchsafed To enter, and these earthly fruits to taste, Food not of Angels, yet accepted so, As that more willingly thou couldst not seem At heaven's high feasts to have fed : yet what compare! To whom the wingéd Hierarch replied: O Adam, one Almighty is, from whom All things proceed, and up to Him return, If not depraved from good, created all * If ever, then, ther.—If the time was ever, it was then. 1 3O PARADISE LOST. [Book V.-472-505. Such to perfection, one first matter all, Endued with various forms, various degrees Of substance, and, in things that live, of life; But more refined, more spirituous, and pure, As nearer to Him placed, or nearer tending Each in their several active spheres assigned, Till body up to spirit work, in bounds Proportioned to each kind. So from the root Springs lighter the green stalk, from thence the leaves More aéry, last the bright consummate flower Spirits odorous breathes: flowers and their fruit, Man's nourishment, by gradual scale sublimed, To vital spirits aspire, to animal, To intellectual; give both life and sense, Fancy and understanding; whence the soul Reason receives, and reason is her being, Discursive, or intuitive; discourse If oftest yours, the latter most is ours, Differing but in degree, of kind the same. Wonder not, then, what God for you saw good If I refuse not, but convert, as you, To proper substance. Time may come when men With angels may participate, and find No inconvenient diet, nor too light fare; And from these corporeal nutriments, perhaps, Your bodies may at last turn all to spirit, Improved by tract of time, and winged, ascend Fthereal, as we; or may, at choice, Here or in heavenly paradises dwell; If ye be found obedient, and retain Unalterably firm, His love entire, Whose progeny you are. Meanwhile enjoy Your fill what happiness this happy state Can comprehend, incapable of more. Book V.-506–539.]. * PARADISE LOST . I 3 I zº, To whom the patriarch of mankind replied: Oh, favourable spirit, propitious guest, Well hast thou taught the way that might direct Our knowledge, and the scale of nature set From centre to circumference; whereon, In contemplation of created things, By steps we may ascend to God. But say, What meant that caution joined, If ye be found Obedient 2 Can we want obedience then To Him, or possibly His love desert, Who formed us from the dust, and placed us here Full to the utmost measure of what bliss Human desires can seek or apprehend ? To whom the Angel: Son of Heaven and Earth, Attend; that thou art happy, owe to God; That thou continuest such, owe to thyself, That is, to thy obedience; therein stand. This was that caution given thee; be advised. God made thee perfect, not immutable ; And good he made thee; but to persevere He left it in thy power; ordained thy will By nature free, not over-ruled by fate Inextricable, or strict necessity. Our voluntary service he requires, Not our necessitated; such with him Finds no acceptance, nor can find ; for how Can hearts not free be tried whether they serve Willing or no, who will but what they must By destiny, and can no other choose 2 Myself, and all the Angelic host that stand In sight of God, enthroned, our happy state Hold, as you yours, while our obedience holds; On other surety none. Freely we serve, Because we freely love, as in our will 132 PARADISE LOST. * [Book V.-540-573. To love or not; in this we stand or fall. And some are fallen, to disobedience fallen, And so from Heaven to deepest Hell—oh, fall From what high state of bliss into what woe To whom our great progenitor: Thy words Attentive, and with more delighted ear, Divine instructor, I have heard, than when Cherubic songs by night from neighbouring hills Aerial music send: nor knew I not - To be both will and deed created free. Yet that we never shall forget to love Our Maker, and obey him whose command Single is yet Śo just, my constant thoughts Assured me, and still assure; though what thou tell'st Hath passed in heaven, some doubt within me move, But more desire to hear, if thou consent, The full relation, which must needs be strange, Worthy of sacred silence to be heard; And we have yet large day, for scarce the sun Hath finished half his journey, and scarce begins His other half in the great zone of heaven. Thus Adam made request; and Raphael, After short pause assenting, thus began: High matter thou enjoinest me, oh, prime of men, Sad task and hard : for how shall I relate To human sense the invisible exploits Of warring spirits 2 how, without remorse, The ruin of so many, glorious once And perfect while they stood 2 how last unfold The secrets of another world, perhaps Not lawful to reveal? Yet for thy good This is dispensed ; and what surmounts the reach Of human sense, I shall delineate SO, By likening spiritual to corporal forms, Book V.-574-607.] - PARADISE LOST. I 33 As may express them best ; though what if earth Be but the shadow of heaven, and things therein Each to other like, more than on earth is thought 2 As yet this world was not, and Chaos wild Reigned where these heavens now roll, where earth now rests Upon her centre poised; when on a day— * For time, though in eternity, applied To motion, measures all things durable By present, past, and future—on such day As heaven's great year brings forth, the empyreal host Of Angels, by imperial summons called, Innumerable before the Almighty's throne Forthwith, from all the ends of heaven, appeared Under their Hierarchs in orders bright. & Ten thousand thousand ensigns high advanced, Standards and gonfalons 'twixt van and rear Stream in the air, and for distinction serve Of Hierarchies, of Orders, and Degrees; Or in their glittering tissues bear imblazed Holy memorials, acts of zeal and love Recorded eminent. Thus when in orbs Of circuit inexpressible they stood, Orb within orb, the Father infinite, By whom in bliss embosomed sat the Son, Amidst, as from a flaming mount, whose top Brightness had made invisible, thus spake: Hear, all ye Angels, progeny of light, Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues, Powers; Hear my decree, which unrevoked shall stand. This day I have begot whom I declare My only Son, and on this holy hill Him have anointed, whom ye now behold At my right hand; your head I Him appoint; And by myself have sworn, to Him shall bow I 34 PARADISE LOST. [Book V.-608-639. All knees in heaven, and shall confess him Lord: Under his great vicegerent reign abide United, as one individual soul, For ever happy. Him who disobeys, Me disobeys, breaks union; and that day, Cast out from God and blessed vision, falls Into utter darkness, deep engulfed, his place Ordained without redemption, without end. So spake the Omnipotent, and with his words All seemed well pleased—all seemed, but were not all. That day, as other solemn days, they spent In song and dance about the sacred hill; Mystical dance, which yonder starry sphere Of planets, and of fixed, in all her wheels Resembles nearest, mazes intricate, Eccentric, intervolved, yet regular Then most, when most irregular they seem : And in their motions harmony divine So smoothes her charming tones, that God's own ear Listens delighted. Evening now approached— For we have also our evening and our morn, We ours for change delectable not need— Forthwith from dance to sweet repast they turn Desirous. All in circles as they stood, Tables are set, and on a sudden piled With angels' food; and rubied nectar flows In pearl, in diamond, and massy gold, Fruit of delicious vines, the growth of heaven. On flowers reposed, and with fresh flowerets crowned, They eat, they drink; and in communion sweet - Quaff immortality and joy, secure Of surfeit,' where full measure only bounds * Secure of surfeit—Secure against it. Book V.—640–673.] PARADISE LOST. . I 35 Excess, before the all-bounteous King, who showered With copious hand, rejoicing in their joy. Now when ambrosial night with clouds exhaled From that high mount of God, whence light and shade Spring both, the face of brightest heaven had changed To grateful twilight, for night comes not there In darker veil,-and roseate dews disposed All but the unsleeping eyes of God to rest; Wide over all the plain, and wider far Than all this globous earth in plain outspread, L Such are the courts of God, the angelic throng, Dispersed in bands and files, their camp extend By living streams among the trees of life, Pavilions numberless, and sudden reared, Celestial tabernacles, where they slept Fanned with cool winds—save those, who, in their course, Melodious hymns about the sovereign throne Alternate all night long. But not so waked Satan—so call him now, his former name Is heard no more in heaven. He of the first, If not the first Archangel, great in power, In favour and pre-eminence, yet fraught With envy against the Son of God, that day Honoured by his great Father, and proclaimed Messiah, king anointed, could not bear Through pride that sight, and thought himself impaired. Deep malice thence conceiving and disdain, Soon as midnight brought on the dusky hour Friendliest to sleep and silence, he resolved With all his legions to dislodge, and leave Unworshipped, unobeyed, the throne supreme, Contemptuous: and his next subordinate Awakening, thus to him in secret spake: Sleepest thou, companion dear? What sleep can close 136 PARADISE LOST. [Book v.–674–706 Thy eye-lids? and rememberest what decree Of yesterday, so late hath passed the lips Of heaven's Almighty Thou to me thy thoughts Was wont, I mine to thee was wont to impart ; Both waking we were one; how then can now Thy sleep dissent 2 New laws thou seest imposed; New laws from Him who reigns, new minds may raise In us who serve, new counsels, to debate What doubtful may ensue—more in this place To utter is not safe. Assemble thou, Of all those myriads which we lead, the chief; Tell them that by command, ere yet dim night Her shadowy clouds withdraws, I am to haste, And all who under me their banners wave, Homeward, with flying march, where we possess The quarters of the North; there to prepare Fit entertainment to receive our king, The great Messiah, and his new commands, Who speedily through all the Hierarchies Intends to pass triumphant, and give laws. So spake the false Archangel, and infused Bad influence into the unwary breast Of his associate. He together calls, Or several one by one, the regent powers, Under him regent; tells, as he was taught, That the Most High commanding, now ere night, Now ere dim night had disencumbered heaven, The great hierarchal standard was to move; Tells the suggested cause, and casts between Ambiguous words and jealousies, to sound Or taint integrity. But all obeyed The wonted signal and superior voice Of their great potentate; for great indeed His name, and high was his degree in heaven. His countenance, as the morning star that guides Book v.–709–742.] PARADISE LOST. - I 37 The starry flock, allured them, and with lies Drew after him the third part of heaven's host. Meanwhile the eternal eye, whose sight discerns Abstrusest thoughts, from forth his holy mount, And from within the golden lamps that burn Nightly before him, saw without their light Rebellion rising; saw in whom, how spread Among the sons of morn, what multitudes Were banded to oppose his high decree; And, smiling, to his only Son thus said: Son, thou in whom my glory I behold In full resplendence, heir of all my might, Nearly it now concerns us to be sure Of our omnipotence, and with what arms We mean to hold what anciently we claim Of deity or empire. Such a foe Is rising, who intends to erect his throne Equal to ours, throughout the spacious North; Nor so content, hath in his thought to try In battle, what our power is, or our right. Let us advise, and to this hazard draw With speed what force is left, and all employ In our defence; lest unawares we lose This our high place, our sanctuary, our hill. To whom the Son, with calm aspect and clear, Lightning divine, ineffable, serene, Made answer: Mighty Father, thou thy foes Justly hast in derision, and, secure, Laugh'st at their vain designs and tumults vain, Matter to me of glory, whom their hate Illustrates, when they see all regal power Given me to quell their pride, and in event Know whether I be dextrous to subdue Thy rebels, or be found the worst in heaven. PARADISE LOST [Book V.-743—77t, So spake the Son: but Satan, with his powers, Far was advanced on winged speed; a host Innumerable as the stars of night, Or stars of morning dewdrops which the sun Impearls on every leaf and every flower. Regions they passed, the mighty Regencies Of Seraphim, and Potentates, and Thrones, In their triple degrees—regions, to which All thy dominion, Adam, is no more Than what this garden is to all the earth, And all the sea, from one entire globose . Stretched into longitude—which having passed, At length into the limits of the North They came; and Satan to his royal seat, High on a hill, far blazing, as a mount Raised on a mount, with pyramids and towers From diamond quarries hewn, and rocks of gold, The palace of great Lucifer—so call That structure in the dialect of men Interpreted—which not long after, he, Affecting all equality with God, In imitation of that mount whereon Messiah was declared in sight of heaven, The Mountain of the Congregation called. For thither he assembled all his train, Pretending so commanded to consult About the great reception of their king, Thither to come ; and with calumnious art Of counterfeited truth thus held their ears. Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues, Powers; If these magnific titles yet remain * * . Not merely titular, since by decree Another now hath to himself engrossed All power, and us eclipsed, under the name Book V.-777–810.] PARADISE LOST. I 39 Of King anointed, for whom all this haste Of midnight march, and hurried meeting here, This only to consult how we may best, With what may be devised of honours new, Receive him coming to receive from us Knee-tribute yet unpaid, prostration vile ! Too much to one, but double how endured To one and to his image now proclaimed 2 But what if better counsels might erect Our minds, and teach us to cast off this yoke 2 Will ye submit your necks, and choose to bend The supple knee ? Ye will not, if I trust To know ye right, or if ye know yourselves Natives and sons of heaven, possessed before By none: and if not equal all, yet free, Equally free; for orders and degrees Jar not with liberty, but well consist. Who can in reason, then, or right, assume Monarchy over such as live by right His equals? If in power and splendour less In freedom equal 2 Or can introduce Law and edict on us, who without law Err not 2 much less for this to be our Lord, And look for adoration, to the abuse Of those imperial titles, which assert Our being ordained to govern, not to serve. Thus far his bold discourse without control Had audience: when among the seraphim Abdiel, than whom none with more zeal adored The Deity, and divine commands obeyed, - Stood up, and in a flame of zeal severe The current of his fury thus opposed : Oh, argument blasphemous, false, and proud Words which no ear ever to hear in Heaven I 4o PARADISE LOST. |Book V.-811–844. Expected, least of all from thee, ingrate, In place thyself so high above thy peers. Canst thou with impious obloquy condemn The just decree of God, pronounced and sworn That to his only Son, by right endued With regal sceptre, every soul in heaven Shall bend the knee, and in that honour due Confess him rightful king 2 Unjust, thou say'st, Flatly unjust, to bind with laws the free, And equal over equals to let reign, One over all with unsucceeded power. - Shalt thou give law to God 2 Shalt thou dispute With Him the points of liberty, who made Thee what thou art, and formed the Powers of heaven Such as he pleased, and circumscribed their being 2 Yet, by experience taught, we know how good, And of our good and of our dignity How provident he is; how far from thought To make us less, bent rather to exalt - Our happy state, under one head more near United. But to grant it thee unjust, That equal over equals monarch reign: - Thyself, though great and glorious, dost thou count, Or all angelic nature joined in one, Equal to Him begotten Son, by whom As by his word, the mighty Father made All things, even thee; and all the Spirits of heaven By him created in their bright degrees, Crowned them with glory, and to their glory named Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues, Powers, Essential Powers; nor by his reign obscured, But more illustrious made, since He the head, One of our number thus reduced becomes, His laws our laws, all honour to him done Book v.–845–878] - PARADISE LOST. I4 I Returns our own. Cease, then, this impious rage, And tempt not these: but hasten to appease . . The incensed Father and the incensed Son, While pardon may be found in time besought. So spake the fervent Angel ; but his zeal None seconded, as out of season judged, Or singular and rash; whereat rejoiced The Apostate, and, more haughty, thus replied: That we were formed then say'st thou, and the work Of secondary hands, by task transferred From Father to his Son 2 strange point and new Doctrine which we would know whence learned. Who saw When this creation was 2 Rememberest thou - Thy making, while the Maker gave thee being 2 is We know no time when we were not as now; Know none before us, self-begot, self-raised By our own quickening power, when fatal course Had circled his full orb, the birth mature Of this our native Heaven, ethereal sons. Our puissance is our own : our own right hand Shall teach us highest deeds, by proof to try Who is our equal. Then thou shalt behold Whether by supplication we intend Address, and to begirt the Almighty throne Beseeching or besieging. This report, These tidings carry to the anointed King; And fly, ere evil intercept thy flight. He said; and, as the sound of waters deep, Hoarse murmur echoed to his words applause Through the infinite host: nor less for that The flaming seraph, fearless, though alone, Encompassed round with foes, thus answered bold: O alienate from God, O spirit accursed, Forsaken of all good l I see thy fall 142 PARADISE LOST. - [Book V.--879–907. Determined, and thy hapless crew involved In this perfidious fraud, contagion spread Both of thy crime and punishment. Henceforth No more be troubled how to quit the yoke Of God's Messiah. Those indulgent laws Will not be now vouchsafed ; other decrees Against thee are gone forth without recall; That golden sceptre which thou didst reject Is now an iron rod to bruise and break Thy disobedience. Well thou didst advise; Yet not for thy advice or threats I fly These wicked tents devoted, lest the wrath Impendent, raging into sudden flame, Distinguish not; for soon expect to feel His thunder on thy head, devouring fire. Then who created thee lamenting learn, When who can uncreate thee thou shalt know. So spake the Seraph Abdiel, faithful found Among the faithless, faithful only he: Among innumerable false, unmoved, Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified, His loyalty he kept, his love, his zeal; Nor number nor example with him wrought To Swerve from truth, or change his constant mind, Though single. From amidst them forth he passed, Long way through hostile scorn, which he sustained Superior, nor of violence feared aught; And with retorted scorn, his back he turned On those proud towers to swift destruction doomed. BOOK VI. RAPHAEL continues to relate how Michael and Gabriel were sent forth to battle against Satan and his angels. The first fight described : Satan and his powers retire under night: he calls a council ; invents devilish engines, which, in the second day's fight, put Michael and his angels to some disorder; but they at length pulling up mountains, overwhelm both the force and machines of Satan : yet the tumult not so ending, God, on the third day, sends Messiah his Son, for whom he had reserved the glory of that victory; He, in the power of his Father, coming to the place, and causing all his legions to stand still on either side, with his chariot and thunder driving into the midst of his enemies, pursues them, unable to resist, towards the wall of heaven; which opening, they leap down with horror and confusion into the place of punishment prepared for them in the deep : Messiah returns with triumph to his Father. LL night the dreadless angel unpursued Through heaven's wide champain held his way; till Morn, Waked by the circling hours, with rosy hand Unbarred the gates of light. There is a cave Within the mount of God, fast by his throne, Where light and darkness in perpetual round Lodge and dislodge by turns, which makes through heaven Grateful vicissitude, like day and night; '' . . . . . Light issues forth, and at the other door Obsequious darkness enters, till her hour To veil the heaven, though darkness there might well Seem twilight here: and now went forth the Morn Such as in highest heaven, arrayed in gold * Empyreal; from before her vanished Night, Shot through with orient beams; when all the plain, Covered with thick embattled squadrons bright, Chariots, and flaming arms, and fiery steeds, Reflecting blaze on blaze first met his view: War he perceived, war in procinct ;' and found Already known what he for news had thought To have reported : gladly then he mixed Among those friendly powers, who him received * War in procinct.—Imminent, near. | 44 * PARADISE LOST. |BOOK WI.-23-55. With joy and acclamations loud, that one, That of so many myriads fallen, yet one Returned not lost. On to the sacred hill They led him high applauded, and present Before the seat supreme; from whence a voice, From 'midst a golden cloud, thus mild was heard : Servant of God, well done; well hast thou fought The better fight, who single hast maintained Against revolted multitudes the cause - Of truth, in word mightier than they in arms; And for the testimony of truth hast borne Universal reproach, far worse to bear Than violence; for this was all thy care, To stand approved in sight of God, though worlds Judged thee perverse. The easier conquest now Remains thee, aided by this host of friends, Back on thy foes more glorious to return, Than scorned thou didst depart, and to subdue By force, who reason for their law refuse, Right reason for their law, and for their king Messiah, who by right of merit reigns. Go, Michael, of celestial armies prince, And thou in military prowess next, i Gabriel, lead forth to battle these my sons Invincible; lead forth my armed saints, By thousands and by millions ranged for fight, Equal in number to that godless crew Rebellious; them with fire and hostile arms Fearless assault, and, to the brow of heaven Pursuing, drive them out from God and bliss Into their place of punishment, the gulf Of Tartarus, which ready opens wide His fiery chaos to receive their fall.' * To receive their fall.—“And there was war in heaven : Michael and his angels fought against the Dragon ; and the Dragon fought and his angels.” Rev. xii. 7. Book VI.—56–89.] PARADISE LOST. - I 4.5 So spake the Sovereign Voice, and clouds began To darken all the hill, and smoke to roll In dusky wreaths, reluctant flames, the sign Of wrath awaked; nor with less dread the loud Ethereal trumpet from on high 'gan blow: At which command the powers militant, That stood for Heaven, in mighty quadrate joined Of union irresistible, moved on • - In silence their bright legions, to the sound Of instrumental harmony, that breathed Heroic ardour to adventurous deeds Under their godlike leaders, in the cause Of God and his Messiah. On they move Indissolubly firm; nor obvious hill, Nor straitening vale, nor wood, nor stream, divides * Their perfect ranks; for high above the ground Their march was, and the passive air upbore Their nimble tread. As when the total kind Of birds, in orderly array on wing, Came, summoned over Eden, to receive Their names of thee; so over many a tract Of heaven they marched, and many a province wide, Tenfold the length of this terrene. At last, Far in the horizon to the North, appeared From skirt to skirt a fiery region stretched In battailous aspect; and, nearer view, Bristled with upright beams innumerable Of rigid spears, and helmets thronged, and shields Various, with boastful argument portrayed, The banded powers of Satan hasting on With furious expedition; for they weened That self-same day, by fight, or by surprise, To win the mount of God, and on His throne To set the envier of his state, the proud *~ T 146 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-90-121. Aspirer; but their thoughts proved fond and vain In the mid-way. Though strange to us it seemed At first, that Angel should with Angel war, And in fierce hosting meet, who wont to meet So oft in festivals of joy and love Unanimous, as sons of one great Sire, Hymning the Eternal Father. But the shout Of battle now began, and rushing sound Of onset ended soon each milder thought. High in the midst, exalted as a god, The Apostate in his sun-bright chariot sat, Idol of majesty divine, enclosed With flaming cherubim, and golden shields; Then lighted from his gorgeous throne, for now 'Twixt host and host but narrow space was left, A dreadful interval, and front to front Presented stood in terrible array Of hideous length. Before the cloudy van, On the rough edge of battle ere it joined, Satan, with vast and haughty strides advanced, Came towering, armed in adamant and gold. Abdiel that sight endured not, where he stood Among the mightiest, bent on highest deeds, And thus his own undaunted heart explores: O Heaven that such resemblance of the Highest Should yet remain, where faith and realty" - Remain not Wherefore should not strength and might There fail where virtue fails or weakest prove Where boldest, though to sight unconquerable 2 His puissance, trusting in the Almighty's aid, I mean to try, whose reason I have tried Unsound and false. Nor is it aught but just * Realty.—Realness. Book VI.-122—153.1 PARADISE LOST. - I47 That he, who in debate of truth hath won, Should win in arms, in both disputes alike Victor; though brutish that contest and foul, When reason hath to deal with force, yet so Most reason is that reason overcome. So pondering, and from his armed peers Forth stepping opposite, half-way he met His daring foe, at this prevention more Incensed, and thus securely him defied: Proud, art thou met 2 Thy hope was to have reached The height of thy aspiring unopposed, The throne of God unguarded, and his side Abandoned, at the terror of thy power \ Or potent tongue. Fool not to think how vain Against the Omnipotent to rise in arms; - Who out of smallest things, could, without end, Have raised incessant armies to defeat Thy folly; or with solitary hand Reaching beyond all limit, at one blow, Unaided, could have finished thee, and whelmed Thy legions under darkness. But thou seest All are not of thy train; there be, who faith Prefer, and piety to God, though then To thee not visible, when I alone Seemed in thy world erroneous to dissent From all; my sect thou seest.” Now learn too late How few sometimes may know, when thousands err. "Whom the grand foe, with scornful eye askance, Thus answered: Ill for thee, but in wished hour Of my revenge, first sought for, thou returnest From flight, seditious Angel! to receive Thy merited reward, the first assay * Securely him defted.—Without fear. My sect thou seest—Those who are at one with me. 148 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.—154–188 Of this right hand provoked, since first that tongue, Inspired with contradiction, durst oppose A third part of the gods, in synod met Their deities to assert; who, while they feel Vigour divine within them, can allow Omnipotence to none. But well thou com'st Before thy fellows, ambitious to win From me some plume, that thy success may show Destruction to the rest. This pause between— Unanswered lest thou boast—to let thee know, At first I thought that liberty and heaven To heavenly souls had been all one ; but now I see that most through sloth had rather serve, Ministring spirits, trained up in feast and song: Such hast thou armed, the minstrelsy of heaven, Servility with freedom to contend, As both their deeds compared this day shall prove. To whom in brief thus Abdiel stern replied: Apostateſ still thou err'st, nor end wilt find Of erring, from the path of truth remote. Unjustly thou depravst it with the name Of servitude, to serve whom God ordains, Or nature. God and nature bid the same, When he who rules is worthiest, and excels Them whom he governs. This is servitude, To serve the unwise, or him who hath rebelled Against his worthier, as thine now serve thee, Thyself not free, but to thyself inthralled; Q Yet lewdly dar'st our ministring upbraid. . Reign thou in Hell, thy kingdom; let me serve In Heaven God ever-blest, and His divine Behests obey, worthiest to be obeyed. Yet chains in hell, not realms, expect: meanwhile, From me returned, as erst thou saidst, from flight, This greeting on thy impious crest receive. This greeting on thy impious crest receive. Aooſé V/., line 188. Book VI.-189–221.] PARADISE LOST. I49 So saying, a noble stroke he lifted high, Which hung not, but so swift with tempest fell On the proud crest of Satan, that no sight, Nor motion of swift thought, less could his shield, Such ruin intercept. Ten paces huge He back recoiled; the tenth on bended knee His massy spear upstaid—as if on earth Winds under ground, or waters forcing way, Sidelong had pushed a mountain from his seat, Half sunk, with all his pines. Amazement seized The rebel thrones, but greater rage, to see Thus foiled their mightiest; ours joy filled, and shout, Presage of victory, and fierce desire Of battle; whereat Michael bid sound The archangel trumpet. Through the vast of Heaven It sounded, and the faithful armies rung Hosanna to the Highest: nor stood at gaze The adverse legions, nor less hideous joined The horrid shock. Now storming fury rose, And clamour, such as heard in heaven till now Was never; arms on armour clashing brayed Horrible discord, and the madding wheels Of brazen chariots raged ; dire was the noise Of conflict; overhead the dismal hiss Of fiery darts in flaming volleys flew, And flying vaulted either host with fire. So under fiery cope together rushed Both battles main," with ruinous assault And inextinguishable rage. All heaven g Resounded; and had earth been then, all earth Had to her centre shook. What wonder 2 when Millions of fierce encountering angels fought On either side, the least of whom could wield * Both battles main.—The mass on both sides. I 50 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI-222-255. & These elements, and arm him with the force Of all their regions. How much more of power Army against army numberless to raise Dreadful combustion warring, and disturb, Though not destroy, their happy native seat; Had not the Eternal King Omnipotent, From his strong hold of heaven, high overruled And limited their might; though numbered such, As each divided legion might have seemed A numerous host, in strength each armed hand A legion ; led in fight, yet leader seemed Each warrior, single as in chief, expert When to advance, or stand, or turn the sway Of battle, open when, and when to close The ridges of grim war. No thought of flight, None of retreat, no unbecoming deed That argued fear; each on himself relied, As only in his arm the moment lay Of victory. Deeds of eternal fame Were done, but infinite; for wide was spread That war, and various; sometimes on firm ground A standing fight; then, soaring on main wing, Tormented all the air; all air seemed then Conflicting fire. Long time in even scale The battle hung; till Satan, who that day Prodigious power had shown, and met in arms No equal, ranging through the dire attack Of fighting seraphim confused, at length Saw where the sword of Michael smote, and felled Squadrons at once; with huge two-handed sway Brandished aloft, the horrid edge came down Wide-wasting. Such destruction to withstand He hasted, and opposed the rocky orb Of tenfold adamant, his ample shield, Book VI.-256-287.] PARADISE LOST. 1 5 I A vast circumference. At his approach The great Archangel from his warlike toil Surceased, and glad, as hoping here to end Intestine war in heaven, the arch-foe subdued, Or captive dragged in chains, with hostile frown And visage all inflamed, first thus began : Author of evil unknown till thy revolt, Unnamed in heaven, now plenteous, as thou seest These acts of hateful strife, hateful to all, Though heaviest, by just measure, on thyself And thy adherents; how hast thou disturbed Heaven's blessed peace, and into nature brought Misery, uncreated till the crime Of thy rebellion ? How hast thou instilled Thy malice into thousands, once upright And faithful, now proved false ? But think not here To trouble holy rest. Heaven casts thee out From all her confines. Heaven, the seat of bliss, Brooks not the works of violence and war. Hence, then, and evil go with thee along, Thy offspring, to the place of evil, Hell, Thou and thy wicked crew—there mingle broils, Ere this avenging sword begin thy doom, Or some more sudden vengeance, winged from God, Precipitate thee with augmented pain. e So spake the prince of Angels; to whom thus The Adversary: Nor think thou with wind Of airy threats to awe whom yet with deeds * * Thou canst not. Hast thou turned the least of these To flight, or if to fall, but that they rise Unvanquished, easier to transact with me,’ That thou shouldst hope, imperious, and with threats * Easier to, &c.—Has this failure against my followers led thee to think it easier to conquer me? I 52 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-288-319. To chase me hence 2 Err not" that so shall end The strife which thou call'st evil, but we style The strife of glory; which we mean to win, Or turn this Heaven itself into the Hell Thou fablest: here, however, to dwell free, If not to reign. Meanwhile thy utmost force, And join Him named Almighty to thy aid, I fly not, but have sought thee far and nigh. They ended parle,” and both addressed for fight Unspeakable; for who, though with the tongue Of angels, can relate, or to what things Liken on earth conspicuous, that may lift Human imagination to such height Of godlike power for likest gods they seemed, Stood they or moved, in stature, motion, arms, Fit to decide the empire of great Heaven. Now waved their fiery swords, and in the air Made horrid circles: two broad suns their shields Blazed opposite, while Expectation stood In horror. From each hand with speed retired, Where erst was thickest fight, the angelic throng, And left large field, unsafe within the wind Of such commotion—such as, to set forth Great things by small, if, Nature's concord broke, Among the constellations war were sprung, - Two planets, rushing from aspect malign Of fiercest opposition, in mid sky Should combat, and their jarring spheres confound. Together both, with next to almighty arm Uplifted imminent, one stroke they aimed That might determine, and not need repeat, As not of power at once; nor odds appeared * Err not.—Think not, deceive not thyself by thinking, &c. * They ended parle.—Talk, debate. : |- |- |- | |- 1n, st knew pa Then Satan fir And writhed him to and fro. I52. p Aook PVI, lines 327, 328. Boor viº-azo-3si.) PARADISE LOST. - I 53 In might or swift prevention. But the sword Of Michael, from the armoury of God, Was given him tempered so, that neither keen Nor solid might resist that edge: it met The sword of Satan, with steep force to smite Descending, and in half cut sheer; nor stayed, But with swift wheel reverse, deep entering, shared' All his right side; then Satan first knew pain, And writhed him to and fro convolved; so sore The griding sword” with discontinuous wound' Passed through him. But the ethereal substance closed, Not long divisible; and from the gash - A stream of nect'rous humour issuing flowed, Sanguine, such as celestial spirits may bleed, And all his armour stained, erewhile so bright. Forthwith, on all sides, to his aid was run By angels many and strong, who interposed Defence, while others bore him on their shields Back to his chariot, where it stood retired From off the files of war. There they him laid Gnashing for anguish, and despite, and shame, To find himself not matchless, and his pride Humbled by such rebuke, so far beneath His confidence to equal God in power. Yet soon he healed ; for spirits that live throughout Vital in every part, not as frail man In entrails, heart, or head, liver or reins, Cannot but by annihilating die; Nor in their liquid texture mortal wound Receive, no more than can the fluid air. All heart they live, all head, all eye, all ear, All intellect, all sense; and, as they please, * Shared—Ploughed down. * Griding sword—Old English for cutting, severing. * With discontinuous wound.—A wound severing the proper continuity of parts. U I 54 PARADISE LOST. [Book vi-3:2-48. They limb themselves, and colour, shape, or size, Assume, as likes them best, condense or rare. Meanwhile, in other parts, like deeds deserved Memorial, where the might of Gabriel fought, And with fierce ensigns pierced the deep array Of Moloch, furious king, who him defied, And at his chariot-wheels to drag him bound Threatened, nor from the Holy One of heaven Refrained his tongue blasphémous; but anon, Down cloven to the waist, with shattered arms, And uncouth pain,' fled bellowing. On each wing, Uriel and Raphael, his vaunting foe, - Though huge, and in a rock of diamond armed, Vanquished Adramelech and Asmadai, Two potent thrones, that to be less than gods Disdained, but meaner thoughts learned in their flight Mangled with ghastly wounds through plate and mail. Nor stood unmindful Abdiel to annoy - The atheist crew, but with redoubled blow, Ariel, and Arioch, and the violence Of Ramiel, scorched and blasted, overthrew. I might relate of thousands, and their names Eternise here on Earth; but those elect Angels, contented with their fame in Heaven, Seek not the praise of men; the other sort, In might though wondrous, and in acts of war, Nor of renown less eager, yet by doom - Cancelled from Heaven and sacred memory, Nameless in dark oblivion let them dwell. For strength from truth divided, and from just, Illaudable, nought merits but dispraise And ignominy; yet to glory aspires, Jacouth pain.—Disfiguring, strange. *. I54. Now Night her course began. Aook VI., line 406. ºf º RN s: º On the foughten field Michael and his angels, prevalent Encamping, placed in guard their watches round. Aook V/., lines 410–412. Book VI.-384–415.] - PARADISE LOST. I 55 Vain-glorious, and through ignominy seeks fame; Therefore eternal silence be their doom. - - And now, their mightiest quelled, the battle swerved, With many an inroad gored; deformed rout Entered, and foul disorder; all the ground With shivered armour strown, and on a heap Chariot and charioteer lay overturned, And fiery-ſoaming steeds; what stood, recoiled, O'er-wearied, through the faint Satanic host, Defensive scarce, or with pale fear surprised, Then first with fear surprised, and sense of pain, Fled ignominious, to such evil brought By sin of disobedience; till that hour Not liable to fear, or flight, or pain. Far otherwise the inviolable Saints, In cubic phalanx firm advanced entire, Invulnerable, impenetrably armed. Such high advantages their innocence Gave them above their foes; not to have sinned, Not to have disobeyed; in fight they stood Unwearied, unobnoxious to be pained * By wound, though from their place by violence moved. Now Night her course began, and, over heaven Inducing darkness, grateful truce' imposed, And silence on the odious din of war. Under her cloudy covert both retired, Victor and vanquished. On the foughten field Michael and his angels, prevalent Encamping, placed in guard their watches round Cherubic waving fires: on the other part, Satan with his rebellious disappeared, Far in the dark dislodged ; and, void of rest, w- * Grateful truce.—Welcome truce. 156 PARADISE LOST. LBOOK WI.-416–447 His potentates to council called by night, And in the midst thus undismayed began: Oh now in danger tried, now known in arms Not to be overpowered, companions dear, Found worthy not of liberty alone, Too mean pretence 1 but, what we more affect, Honour, dominion, glory, and renown: Who have sustained one day, in doubtful fight— And if one day, why not eternal days — What heaven's Lord had powerfulest to send Against us from about his throne, and judged Sufficient to subdue us to his will, But proves not so : then fallible, it seems, Of future' we may deem him, though, till now, Omniscient thought. True is, less firmly armed, Some disadvantage we endured, and pain, Till now not known, but, known, as soon contemned: Since now we find this our empyreal form Incapable of mortal injury, Imperishable, and, though pierced with wound, Soon closing, and by native vigour healed. Of evil, then, so small, as easy think The remedy. Perhaps more valid arms, Weapons more violent, when next we meet, May serve to better us, and worse our foes, Or equal what between us made the odds, In nature none. If other hidden cause Left them superior, while we can preserve Unhurt our minds, and understanding sound, Due search and consultation will disclose. He sat; and in the assembly next upstood Nisroch, of principalities the prime. * Fallible of future.—Not knowing the future. . * True is.-True it is, Book vi.-446-48.1 PARADISE LOST. I 57 As one he stood escaped from cruel fight, Sore toiled, his riven arms to havoc hewn, And, cloudy in aspéct, thus answering spake: Deliverer from new Lords, leader to free Enjoyment of our rights as Gods; yet hard For Gods, and too unequal work we find, Against unequal arms, to fight in pain, Against unpained, impassive; from which evil Ruin must needs ensue. For what avails Valour or strength, though matchless, quelled with pain Which all subdues, and makes remiss the hands Of mightiest? Sense of pleasure we may well Spare out of life, perhaps, and not repine, But live content, which is the calmest life; But pain is perfect misery, the worst Of evils, and, excessive, overturns All patience. He who, therefore, can invent With what more forcible we may offend Our yet unwounded enemies, or arm Ourselves with like defence, to me deserves No less than for deliverance what we owe. Whereto, with look composed, Satan replied: Not uninvented that, which thou aright Believest so main to our success, I bring. Which of us who beholds the bright surfäce Of this ethereous mould whereon we stand, This continent of spacious heaven, adorned With plant, fruit, flower ambrosial, gems, and gold; Whose eye so superficially surveys These things, as not to mind from whence they grow, Deep under ground, materials dark and crude, Of spiritous and fiery spume; till touched With heaven's ray, and tempered, they shoot forth So beauteous, opening to the ambient light? 158 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.—482 -513 - These, in their dark nativity, the deep Shall yield us, pregnant with infernal flame; Which, into hollow" engines, long and round, Thick-rammed, at the other bore with touch of fire Dilated and infuriate, shall send forth From far, with thundering noise, among our foes, Such implements of mischief, as shall dash To pieces, and o'erwhelm, whatever stands Adverse, that they shall fear we have disarmed The Thunderer of His only dreaded bolt. Nor long shall be our labour; yet, ere dawn, Effect shall end our wish. Meanwhile revive; Abandon fear; to strength and counsel joined Think nothing hard, much less to be despaired. He ended; and his words their drooping cheer Enlightened, and their languished hope revived : The invention all admired, and each how he To be the inventor missed; so easy it seemed Once found, which yet unfound most would have thought Impossible. Yet, haply, of thy race, . In future days, if malice should abound, Some one, intent on mischief, or inspired With devilish machination, might devise Like instrument to plague the sons of men For sin, on war and mutual slaughter bent. Forthwith from council to the work they flew; None arguing stood; innumerable hands Were ready; in a moment up they turned Wide the celestial soil, and saw beneath The originals of nature in their crude Conception; sulphurous and nitrous foam They found; they mingled, and, with subtle art, * Which, into hollow, &c.—That which in, &c. Book VI.-514-546. PARADISE LOST. 159 Concocted and adusted,' they reduced To blackest grain, and into store conveyed. Part hidden veins digged up (nor hath this earth Entrails unlike) of mineral and stone, Whereof to found their engines and their balls Of missive ruin; part incentive reed Provide, pernicious with one touch to fire. So all, ere day-spring, under conscious night, Secret they finished, and in order set, With silent circumspection, unespied. Now when fair Morn orient in heaven appeared, Up rose the victor-angels, and to arms The matin trumpet sung; in arms they stood Of golden panoply, refulgent host, Soon banded ; others from the dawning hills Looked round, and scouts each coast, light-armed, scour Each quarter, to descry the distant foe, Where lodged, or whither fled; or if for fight In motion or in halt. Him soon they met, Under spread ensigns, moving nigh, in slow But firm battalion. Back, with speediest sail, Zophiel, of cherubim the swiftest wing, Came flying, and, in mid air, aloud thus cried : Arm, warriors, arm for fight. The foe at hand, Whom fled we thought, will save us long pursuit. This day, fear not his flight; so thick a cloud He comes, and settled in his face I see Sad’ resolution, and secure.* Let each His adamantine coat gird well, and each Fit well his helm, gripe fast his orbed shield, Borne even or high; for this day will pour down, If I conjecture aught, no drizzling showei, But rattling storm of arrows barbed with fire. * And adusted.—Adustus, made to be as dust by fire. * Sad—Grave, thoughtful * Secure.—Confident. 16o PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-547-578. So warned he them, aware themselves, and soon In order, quit of all impediment, Instant, without disturb," they took alarm.’ And onward moved embattled : when, behold ! Not distant far, with heavy pace, the foe Approaching gross and huge, in hollow cube, Training his devilish enginery, impaled On every side with shadowing squadrons deep, To hide the fraud. At interview both stood Awhile ; but suddenly at head appeared Satan, and thus was heard commanding loud : Vanguard, to right and left the front unfold, That all may see who hate us, how we seek Peace and composure, and with open breast Stand ready to receive them, if they like Our overture, and turn not back perverse: But that I doubt. However, witness heaven I Heaven, witness thou anon, while we discharge Freely our part. Ye, who appointed stand, Do as you have in charge, and briefly touch What we propound, and loud, that all may hear. So scoffing in ambiguous words, he scarce Had ended, when to right and left the front Divided, and to either flank retired : Which to our eyes discovered, new and strange, A triple mounted row of pillars, laid On wheels (for like to pillars most they seemed, Or hollowed bodies made of oak or fir, With branches lopt, in wood or mountain felled). Brass, iron, stony mould, had not their mouths With hideous orifice gaped on us wide, Portending hollow truce. At each, behind, * Desturb.-Disturbance. * They took alarm.—Took the warning. Book Vl.—579-610.] PARADISE LOST. 161 A seraph stood, and in his hand a reed Stood waving, tipt with fire; while we, suspense,' Collected stood, within our thoughts amused,’ Not long, for sudden, all at once, their reeds Put forth, and to a narrow vent applied With nicest touch. Immediate, in a flame, - But soon obscured with smoke, all heaven appeared, From those deep-throated engines belched, whose roar Embowelled with outrageous noise the air, And all her entrails tore, disgorging foul Their devilish glut, chained thunderbolts and hail Of iron globes; which, on the victor host Levelled, with such impetuous fury smote, That whom they hit, none on their feet might stand, Though standing else as rocks, but down they fell By thousands, Angel on Archangel rolled, § The sooner for their arms; unarmed, they might Have easily, as spirits, evaded swift By quick contraction or remove; but now Foul dissipation followed, and forced rout; Nor served it to relax their serried files. What should they do? If on they rushed, repulse Repeated, and indecent overthrow Doubled, would render them yet more despised, And to their foes a laughter; for in view Stood ranked of seraphim another row, In posture to displode their second tire Of thunder: back defeated to return They worse abhorred. Satan beheld their plight, And to his mates thus in derision called : O friends ! why come not on these victors proud Erewhile they fierce were coming; and when we, * Suspense.—In suspense. * Within our thoughts amused—Musing, wondering. V 162 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-611-644. To entertain them fair with open front And breast–what could we more ?—propounded terms Of composition, straight they changed their minds, ‘Flew off, and into strange vagaries fell, As they would dance. Yet for a dance they seemed Somewhat extravagant and wild; perhaps, For joy of offered peace. But I suppose, If our proposals once again were heard, We should compel them to a quick result. To whom thus Belial, in like gamesome mood: Leader, the terms we sent were terms of weight, Of hard contents, and full of force urged home; Such as we might perceive amused them all, And stumbled many. Who receives them right, Had need from head to foot well understand; Not understood, this gift they have besides, They show us when our foes walk not upright. So they among themselves in pleasant vein Stood scoffing, heightened in their thoughts beyond All doubt of victory; Eternal Might To match with their inventions they presumed So easy, and of his thunder made a scorn, And all his host derided, while they stood Awhile in trouble. But they stood not long. Rage prompted them at length, and found them arms Against such hellish mischief fit to oppose. Forthwith—behold the excellence, the power, Which God hath in his mighty angels placed Their arms away they threw, and to the hills— For earth hath this variety from heaven Of pleasure situate in hill and dale, - Light as the lightning glimpse, they ran, they flew; From their foundations loosening to and fro, They plucked the seated hills, with all their load, * Book v.–643-676.] PARADISE LOST. - 163 Rocks, waters, woods, and by the shaggy tops Uplifting, bore them in their hands. Amaze, Be sure, and terror, seized the rebel host, When coming towards them so dread they saw The bottom of the mountains upward turned, Till on those cursed engines' triple row They saw them whelmed, and all their confidence Under the weight of mountains buried deep; Themselves invaded next, and on their heads Main promontories flung, which in the air Came shadowing, and oppressed whole legions armed. Their armour helped their harm, crushed in and bruised Into their substance pent, which wrought them pain Implacable, and many a dolorous groan, Long struggling underneath, ere they could wind. Out of such prison, though spirits of purest light, Purest at first, now gross by sinning grown. The rest. in imitation, to like arms Betook them, and the neighbouring hills uptore: So hills amid the air encountered hills, Hurled to and fro with jaculation dire, That under ground they fought in dismal shade. Infernal noise! war seemed a civil game To this uproar: horrid confusion heaped Upon confusion rose. And now all heaven Had gone to wrack, with ruin overspread, Had not the Almighty Father, where He sits Shrined in his sanctuary of heaven secure, Consulting on the sum of things, foreseen This tumult, and permitted all, advised; That his great purpose he might so fulfil, To honour his anointed Son avenged * Implacable.—Not to be assuaged. PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-677–7oS Upon his enemies, and to declare - All power on Him transferred. Whence to his Son, The assessor of his throne, he thus began: Effulgence of my glory, Son beloved, Son, in whose face invisible is beheld Visibly what by Deity I am, And in whose hand what by decree I do, Second Omnipotence two days are past, Two days, as we compute the days of heaven, Since Michael and his powers went forth to tame These disobedient. Sore hath been their fight, As likeliest was, when two such foes met armed: For to themselves I left them ; and thou knowest, Equal in their creation they were formed, Save what sin hath impaired, which yet hath wrought Insensibly, for I suspend their doom ; Whence in perpetual fight they needs must last Endless, and no solution will be found. War wearied hath performed what war can do, And to disordered rage let loose the reins, With mountains, as with weapons, armed; which makes Wild work in heaven, and dangerous to the main.' - Two days are therefore past, the third is Thine; For thee I have ordained it; and thus far Have suffered, that the glory may be thine Of ending this great war, since none but Thou Can end it. Into thee such virtue and grace Immense I have transfused, that all may know In Heaven and Hell thy power above compare; And this perverse commotion governed thus, To manifest Thee worthiest to be Heir Of all things; to be Heir and to be King * To the main.—To Heaven itself—as a whole. Book VI.-709–740.] PARADISE LOST. I 65 By sacred unction, thy deserved right. Go, then, thou Mightiest, in thy Father's might; Ascend my chariot, guide the rapid wheels That shake heaven's basis, bring forth all my war, My bow and thunder; my almighty arms Gird on, and sword upon thy puissant thigh ; Pursue these sons of darkness, drive them out From all heaven's bounds into the utter deep ; There let them learn, as likes them, to despise God, and Messiah, his anointed King. - He said, and on his Son with rays direct Shone full ; He all his Father full expressed, Ineffably into his face received; And thus the filial Godhead answering spake: O Father, O Supreme of heavenly Thrones, First, Highest, Holiest, Best, thou always seek'st To glorify thy Son; I always Thee, As is most just. This I my glory account, My exaltation, and my whole delight, That thou, in me well pleased, declarest thy will Fulfilled, which to fulfil is all my bliss. Sceptre and power, thy giving, I assume, And gladlier shall resign, when in the end Thou shalt be all in all, and I in Thee For ever, and in me all whom thou lovest: But whom thou hatest, I hate, and can put on Thy terrors, as I put thy mildness on, Image of Thee in all things; and shall soon, Armed with thy might, rid heaven of these rebelled," To their prepared ill mansion driven down, To chains of darkness, and the undying worm, That from thy just obedience could revolt, * 7%ese rebelled.—Who have rebelled. 166 PARADISE LOST. BOOK VI.-741–772. Whom to obey is happiness entire. Then shall thy saints, unmixed, and from the impure Far separate, circling thy holy mount, Unfeigned hallelujahs to Thee sing, Hymns of high praise, and I among them chief So said, He, o'er his sceptre bowing, rose From the right hand of glory where he sat; And the third sacred morn began to shine, Dawning through heaven. Forth rushed with whirlwind sound The chariot of Paternal Deity, Flashing thick flames, wheel within wheel undrawn, Itself instinct with spirit, but convoyed By four cherubic shapes. Four faces each Had wondrous; as with stars, their bodies all, And wings, were set with eyes; with eyes the wheels Of beryl, and careering fires between ; Over their heads a crystal firmament, Whereon a sapphire throne, inlaid with pure Amber, and colours of the showery arch. He, in celestial panoply all armed Of radiant Urim,' work divinely wrought, Ascended; at his right hand Victory Sat, eagle-winged ; beside him hung his bow And quiver with three-bolted thunder stored : And from about him fierce effusion rolled Of smoke, and bickering flamé, and sparkles dire: Attended with ten thousand thousand saints, He onward came. Far off His coming shone; And twenty thousand—I their number heard— Chariots of God, half on each hand, were seen. He on the wings of cherub rode sublime, On the crystalline sky, in Sapphire throned, * Of radiant Urim.—-Aaron's breastplate was so called. The word means “brilliancy.” Book VI.-773–807.] . PARADISE LOST. 167 Illustrious far and wide, but by his own First seen; them unexpected joy.surprised, When the great ensign of Messiah blazed Aloft, by angels borne, His sign in heaven; Under whose conduct Michael soon reduced His army, circumfused on either wing, Under their Head embodied all in one. Before him Power Divine his way prepared; At his command the uprooted hills retired Each to his place; they heard His voice, and went Obsequious: Heaven its wonted face renewed, And with fresh flow'rets hill and valley smiled. This saw his hapless foes, but stood obdured, And to rebellious fight rallied their powers, Insensate, hope conceiving from despair . In heavenly spirits could such perverseness dwell ? But to convince the proud what signs avail, Or wonders move, the obdurate to relent 2 They, hardened more by what might most reclaim, Grieving to see His glory, at the sight Took envy, and, aspiring to His height, . Stood re-embattled fierce, by force or fraud Weening to prosper, and at length prevail Against God and Messiah, or to fall In universal ruin last: and now To final battle drew, disdaining flight, Or faint retreat; when the great Son of God To all his host on either hand thus spake : Stand still in bright array, ye saints; here stand, Ye angels armed ; this day from battle rest. Faithful hath been your warfare, and of God Accepted, fearless in his righteous cause; And as ye have received, so have ye done, Invincibly. But of this cursed crew The punishment to other hand belongs: i68 PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-808–842, . Vengeance is His, or whose He sole appoints. Number to this day's work is not ordained, Nor multitude ; stand only, and behold God's indignation on these godless poured By me; not you, but me, they have despised, Yet envied; against me is all their rage, Because the Father, to whom, in heaven supreme, Kingdom, and power, and glory, appertain, Hath honoured me, according to his will. Therefore to me their doom. He hath assigned : That they may have their wish, to try with me In battle which the stronger proves; they all, Or I alone against them; since by strength They measure all, of other excellence Not emulous, nor care who them excels; Nor other strife with them do I vouchsafe. So spake the Son, and into terror changed His countenance, too severe to be beheld, And full of wrath bent on his enemies. At once the four spread out their starry wings With dreadful shade contiguous, and the orbs Of his fierce chariot rolled, as with the sound Of torrent floods, or of a numerous host. He on his impious foes right onward drove, Gloomy as night. Under his burning wheels The steadfast Empyréan shook throughout, All but the throne itself of God. Full soon Among them he arrived, in his right hand Grasping ten thousand thunders, which he sent Before him, such as in their souls infixed Plagues. They, astonished, all resistance lost, All courage; down their idle weapons dropt, O'er shields, and helms, and helmed heads He rode– Of Thrones and mighty Seraphim prostráte; That wished the mountains now might be again /ime 871. - Asook V/. Nine days they fell. A. 168 º'ſ º ſ/º - % º - s º § N º S. || º | p. 168. Hell at last, Yawning, received them whole. Book VI., lines 874, 875. Book VI.-843–877.] . PARADISE LOST. - I69 . Thrown on them, as a shelter from His ire. Nor less on either side tempestuous fell His arrows, from the fourfold-visaged four Distinct with eyes, and from the living wheels Distinct alike with multitude of eyes; One spirit in them ruled, and every eye Glared lightning, and shot forth pernicious fire Among the accursed, that withered all their strength, And of their wonted vigour left them drained, Exhausted, spiritless, afflicted, fallen. * - Yet half his strength he put not forth, but checked His thunder in mid volley; for he meant Not to destroy, but root them out of heaven. The overthrown he raised, and as a herd Of goats or timorous flock together thronged, Drove them before him, thunderstruck, pursued With terrors, and with furies, to the bounds And crystal wall of Heaven; which, opening wide, Rolled inward, and a spacious gap disclosed Into the wasteful Deep. The monstrous sight Struck them with horror backward, but far worse Urged them behind—headlong themselves they threw Down from the verge of Heaven; eternal wrath Burnt after them to the bottomless pit. Hell heard the unsufferable noise; Hell saw Heaven ruining from Heaven, and would have fled Affrighted; but strict Fate had cast too deep Her dark foundations, and too fast had bound. Nine days they fell; confounded Chaos roared, And felt tenfold confusion in their fall Through his wild anarchy; so huge a rout Encumbered him with ruin. Hell at last, Yawning, received them whole, and on them closed; Hell, their fit habitation, fraught with fire Unquenchable, the house of woe and pain. 17O. PARADISE LOST. [Book VI.-878–912 Disburdened Heaven rejoiced, and soon repaired Her mural breach, returning whence it rolled. Sole Victor, from the expulsion of his foes, Messiah his triumphal chariot turned. To meet Him, all his saints, who silent stood Eye-witnesses of his almighty acts, With jubilee advanced; and, as they went, Shaded with branching palm, each order bright Sung triumph, and Him sung victorious King, Son, Heir, and Lord, to Him dominion given, Worthiest to reign. He, celebrated, rode Triumphant through mid heaven, into the courts And temple of his mighty Father throned On high; who into glory Him received, Where now he sits at the right hand of bliss. Thus measuring things in heaven by things on earth, At thy request, and that thou may'st beware By what is past, to thee I have revealed What might have else to human race been hid: The discord which befell, and war in heaven Among the angelic powers, and the deep fall Of those, too high aspiring, who rebelled With Satan ; he who envies now thy state, Who now is plotting how he may seduce Thee also from obedience, that with him, Bereaved of happiness, thou mayest partake His punishment, eternal misery; Which would be all his solace and revenge, As a despite done against the Most High, Thee once to gain companion of his woe. But listen not to his temptations, warn Thy weaker; let it profit thee to have heard, By terrible example, the reward Of disobedience; firm they might have stood, Yet fell; remember, and fear to transgress. BOOK VII. RAPHAEL, at the request of Adam, relates how and wherefore this world was first created; that God, after the expelling of Satan and His angels out of heaven, declared His pleasure to create another world, and other creatures to dwell therein; sends His Son with glory, and attendance of angels, to perform the work of creation in six days : the angels celebrate with hymns the performance thereof, and His re-ascension into Heaven. - - ESCEND 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 Pegaséan 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. * Descend from Heaven.—The theme of the poet now descends from heaven to earth, and he prays that the Muse, or inspiration, which has hitherto been his guide, may descend with him. Urania was one of the Greek muses, dwelling in Olympus, and Milton means to say that under that doubtful name he has sought aid that might enable him to treat of matters which Olympian inspiration could never reveal, and to soar beyond the flight of Pegasus—the horse from whose back Bellerophon fell in his attempted flight towards heaven. * * Eternal Wisdom.—Such was the inspiration the poet sought—that of the Eternal Word. * The Aleian field—The field of wandering, in which Bellerophon roamed after his fall. 172 - PARADISE LOST. [Book VII.-21—51 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 Visit'st 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 Rodopé, 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 Archangel, had forewarned Adam, by dire example, to beware Apostasy, by what befell 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 * The Thracian bard–The Thracians were said to have torn the poet Orpheus, the son of the Muse Calliope, to pieces. Milton here refers to the riotous cavaliers and courtiers of the time of Charles II., from whose hands he seems to have thought it possible that a similar fate might befall himself. Book VII.—52—82.] PARADISE LOST. I 73 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 drought 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 Empyréan, 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 sovereign 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 * With admiration and deep muse.—With wonder and deep thought. * Repealed.—Possibly the word should be “repelled.” That is certainly the idea intended to be conveved. * Conspicuous.-Visible, present to the senses. I 74 PARADISE LOST. - [Book VII.-83-116. 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 florid 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 Book VII.-117–148.] PARADISE LOST. 175 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 seized, 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 * Infer thee.—Make thee--help thee to be. 176 PARADISE LOST. [Book VII.-149–181. 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. Meanwhile, 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 were in Heaven, When such was heard declared the Almighty's will ; • Inhabit lar—With ample space. Book VII.-182—215.] PARADISE LOST. I 77 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. Meanwhile 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 come 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 height, and with the centre mix the pole. * X 178 PARADISE LOST. - - [Book VII.-2, 6-249. Silence, ye troubled waves, and thou Deep, peace, Said then the omnific Word, your discord end Nor stayed; 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 stayed 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 centred, 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 centre 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 aëry 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; Book VII.-25o–283.] PARADISE LOST. - I 79 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 passed uncelebrated, nor unsung By the celestial choirs, 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 Prolific 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, 18O . PARADISE LOST. [Book VII.-284–314 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 error wandering, found their way, And on the washy ooze 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 Desert and bare, unsightly, unadorned, * With torrent rapture.—Torrent which forces everything from its path. * With serpent error wandering.—An obscure expression. A winding path might be described as serpentine; but why is it said to be erroneous 2 Perhaps because it seems to suppose action and reaction, which itself supposes imperfect knowledge. - . - E--------- --- Wave rolling after wave, where way they found ; If steep, with torrent rapture. Book VII., lines 298, 299. i book VII.-315–346.] PARADISE LOST. 181 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 * Frissled hair implicit.—Implicitus—entangled. (Latin.) 182 PARADISE LOST. - ſBook VII.--347-377. 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 grey Dawn, and the Pleiades, before him danced, Shedding sweet influence. Less bright the moon, But opposite in levelled west was set, His mirror, with full face borrowing her light * Altern.-Alternately. * Unlightsome.—Not luminous. º * By tuncture or reflection they augment. — The horns of Venus, which are tinged and magnified by the solar light. º A. 182. And God said: Let the waters generate Reptile with spawn abundant, living soul; And let fowl fly above the earth. Æook V//, lines 387–389. º */cº Book VII.—378–411.) PARADISE LOST. 183 From him ; for other light she needed none In that aspéct, 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 her 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, 184 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK VII.-412–440 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. Meanwhile 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 ačry 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 tuned 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 Tempest the ocean-From the Italian tempestare—bring tempest to it. “The huge dolphin tempesting the wave.”—Pope. * Leviatham.—The whale seems to be intended. * Their callow young.—Young resembling birds unfledged. * They summed their pens.—Summed is a word from falconry. The sense here is—put on their wing feathers. * Mantling proudly.—A term in falconry for spreading the wings like a mantle. * Oary feet.—Feet which act like oars. - = * = --> Sº-c =s =s \\ == e - And seems a moving land; and at his gills Draws in, and at his trunk spouts out, a sea. Book VII., lines 415, 416. -> --- ſºſ | /|||||||| ſ. | | | | || Meanwh The I84. A s, and shores, and fen d caves, i ile the tep s numerous hatch ir brood a Aook V//, lines 417, 418. Book VII.—441–471.] PARADISE LOST. - 185 The dank, and, rising on stiff pennons, tower The mid ačrial 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 solemnised 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 main; the ounce, The libbard, and the tiger, as the mole, Rising, the crumbled earth above them, threw In hillocks; the swift stag from underground Bore up his branching head; scarce from his mould Behemoth, biggest born of earth," upheaved Coloured with the florid hue of rainbows.-The peacock. * Where he wons.—Anglo-Saxon for dwells. * The grassy clods now calved.—Calved is an old English expression for bringing forth generally. Thus the hinds are said to calve. (Job xxxix. ; Psalm xxix.) We read also of the calves of the lips. (Hosea xiv.) * Behemoth, biggest born of earth.-Behemoth in Job is the hippopotamus, the river-horse—here it means the elephant. Y 186 PARADISE LOST. - [BOOK Vlſ.—472-505. 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, Wondrous 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 know'st, 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 airy mane terrific, 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 swam, was walked, Frequent; and of the sixth day yet remained. There wanted yet the master-work, the end Poor vil—so-539] tº PARADISE LOST. 187 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 2—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 know'st, He brought thee into this delicious grove, This garden planted with the trees of God, Delectable both to behold and taste; -r 188 PARADISE LOST. * [BOOK VII.-540-573 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 eat'st 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 shewed 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 Angelic harmonies. The earth, the air Resounded—thou remember'st, 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 T \\ \, |- \ \\ \\ , \,\! \\ \\ \\ } \\ |- , ! |- \ : } And now on earth the seventh . I 88. A. Evening arose in Eden. Book VII, lines 581, 582. ſº * */cº BOOK vil-574-607.] PARADISE LOST. 189 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 stayed—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. I 90 PARADISE LOST. - [Book VII.-608–740. Who can impair Thee, Mighty King, or bound Thy empire 2 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 know'st 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 hallelujahs: 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 seek'st Aught not surpassing human measure, say. - * Hyaline.—"Yakoc, glass, the glassy sea. BOOK VIII. Adam inquires concerning celestial motions ; is doubtfully answered, and exhorted to search rather things more worthy of knowledge; Adam assents; and, still desirous to detain Raphael, relates to him what he remember ed since his own creation; his placing in Paradise; his talk with God concerning solitude and fit society; his first meeting and • nuptials with Eve ; his discourse with the angel thereupon, who, after admonitions repeated, departs. HE angel ended, and in Adam's ear So charming left his voice, that he awhile Thought him still speaking, still stood fixed to hear;" Then, as new-waked, thus gratefully replied: What thanks sufficient, or what recompense Equal, have I to render thee, divine Historian, who thus largely hast allayed The thirst I had of knowledge, and vouchsafed This friendly condescension, to relate Things else by me unsearchable; now heard With wonder, but delight, and, as is due, With glory attributed to the high Creator 2 Something yet of doubt remains, Which only thy solution can resolve. When I behold this goodly frame, this world, Of Heaven and Earth consisting, and compute Their magnitudes ; this earth, a spot, a grain, An atom, with the firmament compared And all her numbered stars, that seem to roll Spaces incomprehensible—for such Their distance argues, and their swift return Diurnal—merely to officiate light Round this opacous earth, this punctual spot,” * Stood fired to hear—“Stood” here should evidently have been “sat.” The first three lines of this book were introduced in the second edition, in which the poem was made to consist of twelve books instead of ten. * This punctual spot.—Punctum, a mere point in comparison with the universe. I 92 PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII.—24-57. One day and night; in all their vast survey Useless besides; reasoning, I oft admire, How nature, wise and frugal, could commit Such disproportions, with superfluous hand So many nobler bodies to create, Greater, so manifold, to this one use, For aught appears, and on their orbs impose Such restless revolution, day by day Repeated; while the sedentary earth, That better might with far less compass move, Served by more noble than herself, attains Her end without least motion, and receives, As tribute, such a sumless journey brought Of incorporeal speed, her warmth and light— Speed, to describe whose swiftness number fails. So spake our sire, and by his countenance seemed Entering on studious thoughts abstruse; which Eve Perceiving, where she sat retired in sight, With lowliness majestic from her seat, And grace that won who saw to wish her stay, Rose, and went forth among her fruits and flowers, To visit how they prospered, bud and bloom, Her nursery; they at her coming sprung, And, touched by her fair tendance, gladlier grew. Yet went she not, as not with such discourse & Delighted, or not capable her ear Of what was high : such pleasure she reserved, Adam relating, she sole auditress; Her husband the relater she preferred Before the angel, and of him to ask Chose rather; he, she knew, would intermix Grateful digressions, and solve high dispute With conjugal caresses from his lip, Not words alone pleased her. O ! when meet now Book VIII.-58–91.] - PARADISE LOST. . I 93 Such pairs, in love and mutual honour joined P With goddess-like demeanour forth she went, Not unattended, for on her, as queen, A pomp of winning graces waited still, And from about her shot darts of desire Into all eyes, to wish her still in sight. And Raphael now, to Adam's doubt proposed, Benevolent and facile thus replied: To ask or search, I blame thee not; for heaven Is as the book of God before thee set, Wherein to read his wondrous works, and learn His seasons, hours, or days, or months, or years. This to attain, whether heaven move or earth, Imports not, if thou reckon right; the rest From man or angel the great Architect Did wisely to conceal, and not divulge His secrets, to be scanned by them who ought Rather admire; or, if they list to try Conjecture, he his fabric of the heavens Hath left to their disputes—perhaps to move His laughter at their quaint opinions wide Hereafter, when they come to model heaven And calculate the stars, how they will wield The mighty frame, how build, unbuild, contrive, To save appearances, how gird the sphere With centric and eccentric scribbled o'er, Cycle and epicyle, orb in orb. w Already by thy reasoning this I guess, Who art to lead thy offspring, and supposest That bodies bright and greater should not serve The less, not bright; nor heaven such journeys run, Earth sitting still, when she alone receives The benefit. Consider first, that great Or bright infers not excellence: the earth, I94 PARADISE LOST. Book VIII.—92–125. Though, in comparison of heaven, so small, Nor glistering, may of solid good contain . More plenty than the sun that barren shines; Whose virtue on itself works no effect, - But in the fruitful earth, there first received, His beams, inactive else, their vigour, find. Yet not to earth are those bright luminaries Officious, but to thee, earth's habitant. And for the heaven's wide circuit, let it speak The Maker's high magnificence, who built So spacious, and his line stretched out so far, That man may know he dwells not in his own, An edifice too large for him to fill, Lodged in a small partition, and the rest Ordained for uses to his Lord best known. The swiftness of those circles attribute, Though numberless, to his omnipotence, That to corporeal substances could add Speed almost spiritual. Me thou think'st not slow, Who since the morning hour set out from Heaven, Where God resides, and ere mid-day arrived In Eden—distance inexpressible - By numbers that have name. But this I urge, Admitting motion in the heavens, to shew Invalid that which thee to doubt it moved; Not that I so affirm, though so it seem To thee who hast thy dwelling here on earth. God, to remove his ways from human sense, Placed heaven from earth so far, that earthly sight, If it presume, might err in things too high, And no advantage gain. What if the sun Be centre to the world, and other stars, By his attractive virtue and their own Incited, dance about him various rounds ! Book VIII.-126–157.] - PARADISE LOST. I95 Their wandering course, now high, now low, then hid, Progressive, retrograde, or standing still, - In six thou seest; and what if seventh to these, The planet Earth, so steadfast though she seem, Insensibly three different motions move 2 Which else to several spheres thou must ascribe, Moved contrary with thwart obliquities; Or save the sun his labour, and that swift Nocturnal and diurnal rhomb' supposed, Invisible else above all stars, the wheel Of day and night; which needs not thy belief, If earth, industrious of herself, fetch day Travelling east, and with her part averse From the sun's beam meet night, her other part Still luminous by his ray. What if that light, Sent from her through the wide transpicuous air, To the terrestrial moon be as a star, Enlightening her by day, as she by night This earth 2 reciprocal, if land be there, Fields and inhabitants. Her spots thou seest As clouds, and clouds may rain, and rain produce Fruits in her softened soil, for some to eat Allotted there; and other suns, perhaps, With their attendant moons, thou wilt descry, Communicating male and female light, Which two great sexes animate the world, Stored in each orb, perhaps, with some that live. For such vast room in nature’ unpossessed By living soul, desert and desolate, Only to shine, yet scarce to contribute Each orb a glimpse of light, conveyed so far Down to this habitable, which returns * Diurnal rhomb.-A term in geometry denoting obliqueness. * For such vast room in nature.—For that such vast room there is in nature. 196 PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII.—158-191. Light back to them, is obvious to dispute. But whether thus these things, or whether not; Whether the sun, predominant in heaven, Rise on the earth, or earth rise on the sun, He from the east his flaming road begin, Or she from west her silent course advance, With inoffensive pace that spinning sleeps On her soft axle, while she paces even, And bears thee soft with the smooth air along, Solicit not thy thoughts with matters hid. Leave them to God above. Him serve and fear. Of other creatures, as Him pleases best, - Wherever placed, let Him dispose; joy thou In what he gives to thee, this Paradise And thy fair Eve; heaven is for thee too high To know what passes there; be lowly wise: Think only what concerns thee, and thy being ; Dream not of other worlds, what creatures there Live, in what state, condition, or degree, Contented that thus far hath been revealed, Not of earth only, but of Highest Heaven. To whom thus Adam, cleared of doubt, replied: How fully hast thou satisfied me, pure Intelligence of heaven, Angel serene ! And, freed from intricacies, taught to live The easiest way, nor with perplexing thoughts To interrupt the sweet of life, from which God hath bid dwell far off all anxious cares, And not molest us, unless we ourselves Seek them with wandering thoughts, and notions vain. But apt the mind or fancy is to rove - Unchecked, and of her roving is no end : Till warned, or by experience taught, she learn, That not to know at large of things remote Book VIII.-192–223.] PARADISE LOST. I 97 From use, obscure and subtle, but to know That which before us lies in daily life, Is the prime wisdom: what is more, is fume, Or emptiness, or fond impertinence, And renders us, in things that most concern, Unpractised, unprepared, and still to seek. Therefore from this high pitch let us descend A lower flight, and speak of things at hand, Useful, whence, haply, mention may arise Of something not unseasonable to ask, By sufferance, and thy wonted favour, deigned. Thee I have heard relating what was done Ere my remembrance. Now, hear me relate My story, which, perhaps, thou hast not heard; And day is yet not spent, till then thou seest How subtly to detain thee I devise, Inviting thee to hear while I relate; Fond,' were it not in hope of thy reply. For, while I sit with thee, I seem in heaven; And sweeter thy discourse is to my ear Than fruits of palm-tree pleasantest to thirst And hunger both, from labour, at the hour Of sweet repast; they satiate, and soon fill, Though pleasant; but thy words, with grace divine Imbued, bring to their sweetness no satiety. To whom thus Raphael answered heavenly meek: Nor are thy lips ungraceful, sire of men, Nor tongue ineloquent; for God on thee Abundantly his gifts hath also poured, Inward and outward both, his image fair: Speaking, or mute, all comeliness and grace Attends thee, and each word, each motion, forms. * Fond.—Foolish. 198 PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII-224-257. Nor less think we in heaven of thee on earth Than of our fellow-servant, and inquire Gladly into the ways of God with Man; For God, we see, hath honoured thee, and set On man his equal love. Say therefore on ; For I that day was absent, as befell, Bound on a voyage uncouth and obscure, Far on excursion toward the gates of hell; Squared in full legion—such command we had— To see that none thence issued forth a spy, Or enemy, while God was in his work; Lest he, incensed at such eruption bold, Destruction with creation might have mixed. Not that they durst without his leave attempt; But us he sends upon his high behests For state, as sovereign King, and to inure Our prompt obedience. Fast we found, fast shut, The dismal gates, and barricadoed strong. But, long ere our approaching, heard within Noise, other than the sound of dance or Song ; Torment, and loud lament, and furious rage. Glad we returned up to the coasts of light Ere Sabbath evening. So we had in charge. But thy relation now ; for I attend, Pleased with thy words no less than thou with mine. So spake the godlike Power, and thus our Sire: For man to tell how human life began Is hard ; for who himself beginning knew 2 Desire with thee still longer to converse - Induced me. As new waked from soundest sleep Soft on the flowery herb I found me laid, In balmy sweat, which with his beams, the sun Soon dried, and on the reeking moisture fed. Straight toward heaven my wondering eyes I turned, Book VIII.-258–289.] PARADISE LOST. 199 And gazed awhile the ample sky; till, raised By quick instinctive motion, up I sprung, As thitherward endeavouring, and upright Stood on my feet. About me round I saw Hill, dale, and shady woods, and sunny plains, And liquid lapse of murmuring streams; by these, Creatures that lived and moved, and walked or flew ; Birds on the branches warbling; all things smiled ; With fragrance and with joy my heart o'erflowed. Myself I then perused,' and limb by limb Surveyed, and sometimes went, and sometimes ran With supple joints, as lively vigour led. But who I was, or where, or from what cause, Knew not. To speak I tried, and forthwith spake; My tongue obeyed, and readily could name Whatever I saw. Thou Sun, said I, fair light, And thou enlightened Earth, so fresh and gay, Ye hills, and dales, ye rivers, woods, and plains, ...And ye that live and move, fair creatures, tell, Tell if ye saw, how came I thus, how here 2 Not of myself; by some great Maker then, In goodness and in power pre-eminent. Tell me how may I know Him, how adore; From whom I have that thus I move and live, And feel that I am happier than I know? While thus I called, and strayed I knew not whither, From where I first drew air, and first beheld This happy light; when answer none returned, On a green shady bank, profuse of flowers, Pensive I sat me down : there gentle sleep First found me, and with soft oppression seized My drowsed sense, untroubled, though I thought Perused.--Examined, 2OO PARADISE LOST. - [Book VIII.-290–321. I then was passing to my former state Insensible, and forthwith to dissolve. When suddenly stood at my head a dream, Whose inward apparition gently moved My fancy to believe I yet had being, And lived. One came, me thought, of shape divine, And said, Thy mansion wants thee, Adam ; rise, First man, of men innumerable ordained First father | Called by thee, I come thy guide To the garden of bliss, thy seat prepared. So saying, by the hand he took me, raised, And over fields and waters, as in air Smooth sliding without step, last led me up A woody mountain, whose high top was plain, A circuit wide enclosed, with goodliest trees Planted, with walks and bowers; that what I saw Of earth before scarce pleasant seemed. Each tree, Loaden with fairest fruit, that hung to the eye Tempting, stirred in me sudden appetite To pluck and eat; whereat I waked, and found Before mine eyes all real, as the dream Had lively shadowed. Here had new begun My wandering, had not He, who was my guide Up hither, from among the trees appeared, Presence Divine. Rejoicing, but with awe, In adoration at His feet I fell Submiss." He reared me, and, Whom thou sought'st I am, Said mildly, Author of all this thou seest Above, or round about thee, or beneath. This Paradise I give thee; count it thine To till and keep, and of the fruit to eat. Of every tree that in the garden grows * Submiss.—Bowing down, submissive. Book viii-322-3sal PARADISE LOST. 201 Eat freely with glad heart; fear here no dearth, But of the tree, whose operation brings Knowledge of good and ill, which I have set The pledge of thy obedience and thy faith, Amid the garden by the tree of life— Remember what I warn thee—shun to taste, And shun the bitter consequence; for know, The day thou eat'st thereof, my sole command Transgressed, inevitably thou shalt die, From that day mortal, and this happy state Shalt lose, expelled from hence into a world Of woe and sorrow. Sternly He pronounced The rigid interdiction, which resounds Yet dreadful in mine ear, though in my choice Not to incur; but soon His clear aspéct Returned, and gracious purpose thus renewed: Not only these fair bounds, but all the earth To thee and to thy race I give; as lords Possess it, and all things that therein live, Or live in sea, or air; beast, fish, and fowl. In sign whereof, each bird and beast behold After their kinds, I bring them to receive From thee their names,' and pay thee fealty With low subjection. Understand the same Of fish within her watery residence, Not hither summoned, since they cannot change Their element to draw the thinner air. As thus he spake, each bird and beast behold, Approaching two and two ; these cowering low With blandishment, each bird stooped on his wing I named them as they passed, and understood * From thee their names.—“The Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air, and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them : and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.” (Gen. ii. 19.) 2 A 2C 2 PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII-353 Their nature; with such knowledge God endued My sudden apprehension. But in these I found not what me thought I wanted still ; And to the heavenly vision thus presumed : Oh, by what name, for Thou above all these, Above mankind, or aught than mankind higher, Surpassest far my naming ; how may I Adore thee, Author of this universe, - And all this good to man 2 for whose well-being So amply, and with hands so liberal, -> Thou hast provided all things. But with me I see not who partakes. In solitude What happiness 2 Who can enjoy alone, Or, all enjoying, what contentment find 2 Thus I, presumptuous; and the Vision bright, As with a smile more brightened, thus replied: What call'st thou solitude : Is not the Earth With various living creatures, and the air, Replenished, and all these at thy command To come and play before thee Know'st thou not Their language and their ways 2 They also know, And reason not contemptibly; with these Find pastime, and bear rule; thy realm is large. So spake the Universal Lord, and seemed So ordering. I, with leave of speech implored, And humble deprecation, thus replied: Let not my words offend thee, heavenly Power; My Maker, be propitious while I speak. Hast thou not made me here thy substitute. And these inferior far beneath me set 2 Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight 2 Which must be mutual, in proportion due Given and received; but, in disparity, Book VIII.-387–420.] PARADISE LOST. 203 The one intense, the other still remiss, Cannot well suit with either, but soon prove Tedious alike. Of fellowship I speak Such as I seek, fit to participate All rational delight, wherein the brute Cannot be human consort. They rejoice Each with their kind, lion with lioness; So fitly them in pairs thou hast combined: Much less can bird with beast, or fish with fowl, So well converse, nor with the ox the ape; Worse, then, can man with beast, and least of all. Whereto the Almighty answered, not displeased A nice and subtle happiness, I see Thou to thyself proposest, in the choice Of thy associates, Adam, and wilt taste No pleasure, though in pleasure, solitary. What think'st thou, then, of me, and this my state 2 Seem I to thee sufficiently possessed - Of happiness, or not, who am alone From all eternity? for none I know Second to ine, or like, equal much less. How have I, then, with whom to hold converse, Save with the creatures which I made, and those To me inferior, infinite descents . Beneath what other creatures are to thee He ceased ; I lowly answered : To attain The height and depth of Thy eternal ways All human thoughts come short, Supreme of things! Thou in Thyself art perfect, and in Thee . Is no deficience found: not so is Man, But in degree, the cause of his desire, By conversation with his like, to help Or solace his defects. No need that Thou Shouldst propagate, already infinite, 2O4 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK VIII.-421–454. And through all numbers absolute, though one. But man by number is to manifest His single imperfection, and beget Like of his like, his image multiplied, In unity defective; which requires Collateral love, and dearest amity. Thou in thy secrecy, although alone, Best with Thyself accompanied, seek'st not Social communication; yet, so pleased, Canst raise thy creature to what height thou wilt Of union or communion, deified: I, by conversing, cannot these erect From prone, nor in their ways complacence find. Thus I, emboldened, spake, and freedom used Permissive, and acceptance found; which gained This answer from the gracious Voice divine : Thus far to try thee, Adam, I was pleased ; And find thee knowing, not of beasts alone, Which thou hast rightly named, but of thyself; Expressing well the spirit within thee free, My image, not imparted to the brute; - Whose fellowship, therefore, unmeet for thee, Good reason was thou freely shouldst dislike, And be so minded still. I, ere thou spakest, Knew it not good for man to be alone; And no such company as then thou saw'st ‘Intended thee; for trial only brought, To see how thou couldst judge of fit and meet. What next I bring shall please thee, be assured, Thy likeness, thy fit help, thy other self, - Thy wish exactly to thy heart's desire. He ended, or I heard no more; for now My earthly by His heavenly overpowered, Which it had long stood under, strained to the height 3ook VIII.-455–488.] PARADISE LOST. - 205 In that celestial colloquy sublime, As with an object that excels the sense, Dazzled and spent, sunk down, and sought repair Of sleep, which instantly fell on me, called By nature as in aid, and closed mine eyes. Mine eyes he closed, but open left the cell Of fancy, my internal sight; by which, Abstract, as in a trance, methought I saw, Though sleeping, where I lay, and saw the shape Still glorious before whom awake I stood, Who, stooping, opened my left side, and took - From thence a rib, with cordial spirits warm, And life-blood streaming fresh. Wide was the wound, But suddenly with flesh filled up and healed. - The rib he formed and fashioned with his hands; Under His forming hands a creature grew, Man-like, but different sex; so lovely fair, That what seemed fair in all the world, seemed now Mean, or in her summed up, in her contained, And in her looks, which, from that time, infused Sweetness unto my heart unfelt before, And into all things, from her air, inspired sº The spirit of love and amorous delight. She disappeared, and left me dark; I waked To find her, or for ever to deplore Her loss, and other pleasures all abjure; When out of hope, behold her, not far off, Such as I saw her in my dream, adorned With what all earth or heaven could bestow To make her amiable. On she came, Led by her heavenly Maker, though unseen, And guided by his voice; nor uninformed Of nuptial sanctity and marriage rites. Grace was in all her steps, heaven in her eye, 2O6 PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII.-489-520. In every gesture dignity and love. I, overjoyed, could not forbear aloud: This turn hath made amends : thou hast fulfilled Thy words, Creator bounteous and benign, Giver of all things fair but fairest this Of all thy gifts nor enviest. I now see Bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh, myself Before me. Woman is her name; of man Extracted : for this cause he shall forego Father and mother, and to his wife adhere; And they shall be one flesh, one heart, one soul She heard me thus: and, though divinely brought, Yet innocence and virgin modesty, Her virtue and the conscience of her worth,' That would be wooed, and not unsought be won, Not obvious, not obtrusive, but, retired, The more desirable; or, to say all, Nature herself, though pure of sinful thought, Wrought in her so, that, seeing me, she turned; I followed her; she what was honour knew, And with obsequious majesty approved - My-pleaded reason. To the nuptial bower I led her, blushing like the morn: all heaven, And happy constellations, on that hour Shed their selectest influence: the earth Gave sign of gratulation, and each hill; Joyous the birds; fresh gales and gentle airs Whispered it to the woods, and from their wings Flung rose, flung odours from the spicy shrub, Disporting, till the amorous bird of night Sung spousal, and bid haste the evening star, On his hill-top, to light the bridal lamp. * Conscience of her worth.-Conscious of knowing it. Book VIII.-521-554.] PARADISE LOST. 2O7 Thus have I told thee all my state, and brought My story to the sum of earthly bliss Which I enjoy; and must confess to find In all things else delight indeed, but such As, used or not, works in the mind no change, Nor vehement desire; these delicacies I mean of taste, sight, smell, herbs, fruits, and flowers, Walks, and the melody of birds. But here º Far otherwise, transported I behold, Transported touch; here passion first I felt, Commotion strangel in all enjoyments else Superior and unmoved ; here only weak Against the charm of beauty's powerful glance, Or nature failed in me, and left some part Not proof enough such object to sustain; Or, from my side subducting, took, perhaps, More than enough; at least on her bestowed Too much of ornament, in outward show Elaborate, of inward less exact. - For well I understand, in the prime end Of nature, her the inferior in the mind And inward faculties, which most excel; In outward, also, her resembling less His image who made both, and less expressing The character of that dominion given O'er other creatures. Yet, when I approach Her loveliness, so absolute she seems, And in herself complete, so well to know Her own, that what she wills to do or say Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best. All higher knowledge in her presence falls Degraded. Wisdom in discourse with her Loses, discountenanced, and like folly shews. Authority and reason on her wait, - PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII.-555-586. As one intended first, not after made Occasionally; and, to consummate all, Greatness of mind, and nobleness, their seat Build in her loveliest, and create an awe About her, as a guard angelic placed. To whom the Angel, with contracted brow: Accuse not Nature, she hath done her part; Do thou but thine, and be not diffident Of wisdom; she deserts thee not, if thou Dismiss not her, when most thou need'st her nigh, By attributing overmuch to things Less excellent, as thou thyself perceivest. For, what admirest thou, what transports thee so An outside; fair, no doubt, and worthy well Thy cherishing, thy honouring, and thy love; Not thy subjection; weigh with her thyself; Then value. Ofttimes nothing profits more Than self-esteem, grounded on just and right Well managed. Of that skill, the more thou knowst, The more she will acknowledge thee her head, And to realities yield all her shows: ... • Made so adorn' for thy delight the more, So awful, that with honour thou may'st love Thy mate, who sees when thou art seen least wise. But if the sense of touch, whereby mankind Is propagated, seem such dear delight Beyond all other, think the same vouchsafed To cattle and each beast; which would not be To them made common and divulged, if aught Therein enjoyed were worthy to subdue The soul of man, or passion in him move What higher in her society thou find'st * Made so adorn.-Adorned. Book VIII.—587–62o.] PARADISE LOST. 209 Attractive, human, rational, love still ; In loving thou dost well, in passion not, Wherein true love consists not. Love refines The thoughts, and heart enlarges; hath his seat In reason, and is judicious; is the scale By which to heavenly love thou may'st ascend, Not sunk in carnal pleasure; for which cause, Among the beasts no mate for thee was found. To whom thus, half abashed, Adam replied: Neither her outside, formed so fair, nor aught In procreation, common to all kinds— Though higher of the genial bed by far, And with mysterious reverence I deem— So much delights me, as those graceful acts, Those thousand decencies, that daily flow From all her words and actions, mixed with love And sweet compliance, which declare unfeigned Union of mind, or in us both one soul: Harmony to behold in wedded pair More grateful than harmonious sound to the ear. Yet these subject not; I to thee disclose What inward thence I feel, not therefore foiled, Who meet with various objects, from the sense Variously representing; yet, still free, Approve the best, and follow what I approve. To love thou blamest me not; for love, thou say'st, Leads up to heaven, is both the way and guide. Bear with me, then, if lawful what I ask: Love not the heavenly Spirits, and how their love Express they, by looks only, or do they mix Irradiance, virtual or immediate touch To whom the angel, with a smile that glowed Celestial rosy red, love's proper hue, . . Answered : Let it suffice thee that thou knowest - - 2 B 2 IO PARADISE LOST. [Book VIII.-621—653. Us happy, and without love no happiness. Whatever pure thou in the body enjoyest— And pure thou wert created—we enjoy In eminence, and obstacle find none Of membrane, joint, or limb, exclusive bars. Easier than air with air, if Spirits embrace, Total they mix, union of pure with pure Desiring, nor restrained conveyance need, As flesh to mix with flesh, or soul with soul. But I can now no more ; the parting Sun, Beyond the Earth's green cape and verdant isles Hesperian, sets; my signal to depart. Be strong, live happy, and love; but, first of all, Him, whom to love is to obey; and keep His great command. Take heed lest passion sway Thy judgment to do aught which, else, free-will Would not admit: thine, and of all thy sons, The weal or woe in thee is placed ; beware I in thy persevering shall rejoice, And all the blest. Stand fast; to stand or fall Free in thine own arbitrement it lies. - Perfect within, no outward aid require; And all temptation to transgress repel. So saying, he arose, whom Adam thus Followed with benediction: Since to part, Go, heavenly guest, ethereal messenger, Sent from whose sovereign goodness I adore Gentle to me and affable hath been Thy condescension, and shall be honoured ever With grateful memory; thou to mankind Be good and friendly still, and oft return So parted they : the Angel up to heaven From the thick shade, and Adam to his bower So parted they: the Angel up to heaven From the thick shade, and Adam to his bower. Book V///, lines 652, 653. BOOK IX. SATAN, having compassed the earth, with meditated guile returns, as a mist, by night, into Paradise ; enters into the serpent sleeping. Adam and Eve in the morning go forth to their labours, which Eve proposes to divide in several places, each labouring apart: Adam consents not, alleging the danger lest that enemy of whom they were forewarned, should attempt her, found alone: Eve, loth to be thought not circumspect or firm enough, urges her going apart, the rather desirous to make trial of her strength; Adam at last yields; the serpent finds her alone: his subtle approach, first gazing, then speaking; with much flattery extolling Eve above all other creatures. Eve, wondering to hear the serpent speak, asks how he attained to human speech, and such understanding, not till now : the serpent answers that, by tasting of a certain tree in the garden, he attained both to speech and reason, till then void of both. Eve requires him to bring her to that tree, and finds it to be the tree of knowledge, forbidden : the serpent, now grown bolder, with many wiles and arguments induces her at length to eat; she, pleased with the taste, deliberates awhile whether to impart thereof to Adam or not; at last brings him of the fruit: relates what persuaded her to eat thereof. Adam, at first amazed, but perceiving her lost, resolves, through vehemence of love, to perish with her; and, extenuating the trespass, eats also of the fruit: the effects thereof in them both ; they seek to cover their nakedness; then fall to variance and accusation of one another. O more of talk where God, or Angel guest, With Man, as with his friend, familiar used To sit indulgent, and with him partake Rural repast; permitting him the while Venial discourse' unblamed. I now must change Those notes to tragic; foul distrust, and breach Disloyal, on the part of Man, revolt And disobedience; on the part of Heaven, Now alienated, distance, and distaste, Anger and just rebuke, and judgment given, That brought into this world a world of woe, Sin and her shadow death, and misery Death's harbinger. Sad taskſ yet argument Not less, but more heroic than the wrath Of stern Achilles” on his foe pursued, Thrice fugitive, about Troy wall; or rage Of Turnus for Lavinia” disespoused; * Venial discourse.—Pardonable, allowable. * Stern Achilles.—The principal hero in the “Iliad,” described as the most handsome and brave of all the Greeks. * Of Turnus for Lavinia.-A Latin prince who fought against AEneas, because King Latinus had given his daughter Lavinia to him in marriage. 2 I 2 PARADISE LOST. ſBook IX.-18–48. Or Neptune's ire, or Juno's," that so long Perplexed the Greek, and Cytherea's son; If answerable style I can obtain Of my celestial patroness, who deigns Her nightly visitation unimplored, And dictates to me slumbering, or inspires Easy my unpremeditated verse, Since first this subject for heroic song Pleased me, long choosing and beginning late, Not sedulous by nature to indite Wars, hitherto the only argument Heroic deemed, chief mastery to dissect, With long and tedious havoc, fabled knights, In battles feigned—the better fortitude Of patience and heroic martyrdom Unsung—or to describe races and games, Or tilting furniture, emblazoned shields, Impresses quaint, caparisons and steeds, Bases and tinsel trappings, gorgeous knights At joust and tournament, then marshalled feast Served up in hall with sewers and seneschals, The skill of artifice or office mean, Not that which justly gives heroic name To person or to poem. Me, of these Nor skilled nor studious, higher argument Remains; sufficient of itself to raise That name, unless an age too late, or cold Climate, or years, damp my intended wing Depressed; and much they may if all be mine, Not hers, who brings it nightly to my ear.” The sun was sunk, and after him the star * Neptune's ire, or ?uno's.—Neptune was hostile to Ulysses, Juno to Æneas. * Cytherea.—One of the names of Venus. * Wightly to my ear—These personal episodes have been censured by critics as displaced in such a poem, and perhaps not without reason. But as they come from Milton, the reader, we doubt not, will give them a cordial and sympathetic welcome. º, W M Wºwºw § - N - N |N N w sº \\ \ \ \\ \ WW ſº º \\\\\\\ N \\\ W N \\\\\\ ºw \\\\\\\ º N \ - - -- º º \\ |\\ |||| º """ º A. 212. In with the river sunk, and with it rose, | Satan. Aook /X., Znes 74, 75. BOOK IX. —49–80. PARADISE LOST. 2 I 3 Of Hesperus, whose office is to bring Twilight upon the earth, short arbiter 'Twixt day and night; and now, from end to end, Night's hemisphere had veiled the horizon round, When Satan, who late fled before the threats Of Gabriel out of Eden, now improved In meditated fraud and malice, bent On Man's destruction, maugre what might hap Of heavier on himself, fearless returned. By night he fled, and at midnight returned From compassing the earth; cautious of day, Since Uriel, regent of the sun, descried His entrance, and forewarned the cherubim That kept their watch. . Thence, full of anguish, driven, The space of seven continued nights he rode With darkness: thrice the equinoctial line He circled, four times crossed the car of Night From pole to pole, travérsing each colure;" On the eighth returned, and, on the coast averse From entrance or cherubic watch, by stealth Found unsuspected way. There was a place, Now not, though sin, not time, first wrought the change, Where Tigris, at the foot of Paradise, Into a gulf shot under ground, till part Rose up a fountain by the tree of life: In with the river sunk, and with it rose, Satan, involved in rising mist, then sought Where to lie hid. Sea he had searched, and land From Eden over Pontus, and the pool Maeotis, up beyond the river Ob ; Downward as far antarctic; and, in length, West from Orontes to the ocean barred " Each colure.-The colures are two great circles intersecting each other at right angles in the poles, and encompassing the earth from north to south, and from south to north again, so that to traverse these was to traverse the whole globe. 2 I 4. PARADISE LOST. [BOOK IX.-81-, 14. At Darien, thence to the land where flows Ganges and Indus. Thus the orb he roamed With narrow search, and, with inspection deep, Considered every creature, which of all Most opportune might serve his wiles, and found The serpent subtlest beast of all the field. Him, after long debate, irresolute, Of thoughts revolved, his final sentence chose, Fit vessel, fittest imp of fraud, in whom To enter, and his dark suggestions hide From sharpest sight; for, in the wily snake, Whatever sleights, none would suspicious mark, As from his wit and native subtlety Proceeding, which, in other beasts observed, Doubt might beget of diabolic power Active within, beyond the sense of brute. Thus he resolved, but first, from inward grief, His bursting passion into plaints thus poured: O Earth, how like to Heaven, if not preferred More justly, seat worthier of gods, as built With second thoughts, reforming what was old ! For what god, after better, worse would build 2 Terrestrial Heaven, danced round by other heavens That shine, yet bear their bright officious lamps, Light above light, for thee alone, as seems, In thee concentring all their precious beams Of sacred influence As God in Heaven Is centre, yet extends to all; so thou, Centring, receivest from all those orbs; in thee, Not in themselves, all their known virtue appears Productive in herb, plant, and nobler birth Of creatures animate with gradual life Of growth, sense, reason, all summed up in Man. With what delight could I have walked thee round, O Earth, how like to Heaven, if not preferred More justly. Aook IX., lines 99, Ioo. Book IX.- 115–148.] PARADISE LOST. 2 I 5 If I could joy in aught ! Sweet interchange Of hill, and valley, rivers, woods, and plains, Now land, now sea, and shores with forest crowned, Rocks, dens, and caves | But I in none of these Find place or refuge; and the more I see Pleasures about me, so much more I feel Torment within me, as from the hateful siege Of contraries. All good to me becomes Bane, and in heaven much worse would be my state, But neither here seek I, no, nor in Heaven, To dwell, unless by mastering heaven's Supreme. Nor hope to be myself less miserable By what I seek, but others to make such As I, though thereby worse to me redound. For only in destroying I find ease To my relentless thoughts; and, him destroyed, Or won to what may work his utter loss, For whom all this was made, all this will soon Follow, as to him linked in weal or woe: In woe then ; that destruction wide may range. To me shall be the glory sole among The infernal Powers, in one day to have marred What He, Almighty styled, six nights and days Continued making, and who knows how long Before had been contriving, though, perhaps, Not longer than since I, in one night, freed, From servitude inglorious, well-nigh half The angelic name, and thinner left the throng Of his adorers. He, to be avenged, And to repair his numbers thus impaired, Whether such virtue, spent of old, now failed More Angels to create—if they at least Are His created—or, to spite us more, Determined to advance into our room 2 I 6 PARADISE LOST. [Book IX. — 149–182 A creature formed of earth, and him endow, Exalted from so base original, With heavenly spoils, our spoils. What he decreed, He effected; man he made, and for him built, Magnificent, this world, and Earth his seat, Him lord pronounced, and, O indignity! Subjected to his service, Angel-wings, And flaming ministers, to watch and tend Their earthly charge. Of these the vigilance I dread; and, to elude, thus wrapt in mist Of midnight vapour, glide obscure, and pry /In every bush and brake, where hap may find The serpent sleeping, in whose mazy folds To hide me, and the dark intent I bring. O foul descent that I, who erst contended With gods to sit the highest, am now constrained Into a beast; and, mixed with beastial slime, This essence to incarnate and imbrute, That to the height of Deity aspired ! But what will not ambition and revenge Descend to ? Who aspires, must down as low As high he soared, obnoxious, first or last, To basest things. Revenge, at first so sweet, Bitter ere long, back on itself recoils. Let it—I reck not, so it light well-aimed, Since higher I fall short, on him who next Provokes my envy, this new favourite Of Heaven, this man of clay, son of despite; Whom, us the more to spite, his Maker raised From dust. Spite then with spite is best repaid. So saying, through each thicket, dank or dry, Like a black mist, low creeping, he held on His midnight search, where soonest he might find The serpent. Him, fast sleeping, soon he found ºº º Nºş S. Him, fast sleeping, soon he found In labyrinth of many a round, self-rolled. /}ook /X., lines 182, 183. Book IX— 183—216.] PARADISE LOST. 217 In labyrinth of many a round, self-rolled, His head the midst, well stored with subtle wiles, Not yet in horrid shade or dismal den, Nor nocent yet; but, on the grassy herb, Q Fearless, unfeared, he slept. In at his mouth The devil entered, and his brutal sense, In heart or head, possessing, soon inspired With act intelligential; but his sleep Disturbed not, waiting close the approach of morn. Now, when as sacred light began to dawn In Eden on the humid flowers, that breathed Their morning incense, when all things that breathe, From the earth's great altar, sent up silent praise To the Creator, and His nostrils fill With grateful smell, forth came the human pair, And joined their vocal worship to the quire Of creatures wanting voice; that done, partake The season, prime for sweetest scents and airs: Then commune how that day they best may ply Their growing work; for much their work outgrew The hands' dispatch of two, gardening so wide; And Eve first to her husband thus began : Adam, well may we labour still to dress This garden, still to tend plant, herb, and flower, Our pleasant task enjoined ; but till more hands Aid us, the work under our labour grows, Luxurious by restraint; what we by day Lop, overgrown, or prune, or prop, or bind, One night o' two with wanton growth derides, Tending to wild. Thou, therefore, now advise, Or hear what to my mind first thoughts present: Let us divide our labours; thou, where choice Leads thee, or where most needs, whether to wind The woodbine round this arbour, or direct . 2 18 PARADISE LOST. ſBook IX.-217–250. The clasping ivy where to climb ; while I, In yonder spring of roses intermixed With myrtle, find what to redress till noon: For, while so near each other thus all day Our task we choose, what wonder if, so near, Looks intervene, and smiles, or object new Casual discourse draw on, which intermits Our day's work, brought to little, though begun . Early, and the hour of supper comes unearned 2 To whom mild answer Adam thus returned: . Sole Eve, associate sole, to me, beyond g Compare, above all living creatures dear! Well hast thou motioned, well thy thoughts employed, How we might best fulfil the work which here God hath assigned us ; nor of me shalt pass Unpraised; for nothing lovelier can be found In woman, than to study household good, And good works in her husband to promote. Yet not so strictly hath our Lord imposed Labour, as to debar us when we need Refreshment, whether food, or talk between, Food of the mind, or this sweet intercourse Of looks and smiles, for smiles from reason flow, To brute denied, and are of love the food, Love, not the lowest end of human life. For not to irksome toil, but to delight, He made us, and delight to reason joined. These paths and bowers doubt not but our joint hands Will keep from wilderness with ease, as wide As we need walk, till younger hands ere long Assist us. But if much converse, perhaps, Thee satiate, to short absence I could yield; For solitude sometimes is best society, And short retirement urges sweet return. Book IX.-251–284.] PARADISE LOST. - 2 I 9 But other doubt possesses me, lest harm Befall thee, severed from me; for thou know'st What hath been warned us ; what malicious foe, Envying our happiness, and of his own Despairing, seeks to work us woe and shame By sly assault; and somewhere, nigh at hand, Watches, no doubt, with greedy hope to find His wish and best advantage, us asunder; Hopeless to circumvent us joined, where each To other speedy aid might lend at need. Whether his first design be to withdraw Our fealty from God, or to disturb Conjugal love, than which, perhaps, no bliss Enjoyed by us excites his envy more; Or this, or worse, leave not the faithful side That gave thee being, still shades thee, and protects. The wife, where danger or dishonour lurks, Safest and seemliest by her husband stays, Who guards her, or with her the worst endures. To whom the virgin majesty of Eve, As one who loves, and some unkindness meets, With sweet austere composure thus replied : Offspring of heaven and earth, and all earth's lord. That such an enemy we have, who seeks Our ruin, both by thee informed I learn, And from the parting Angel overheard, As in a shady nook I stood behind, Just then returned at shut of evening flowers. But that thou shouldst my firmness therefore doubt To God or thee, because we have a foe May tempt it, I expected not to hear. His violence thou fearest not; being such As we, not capable of death or pain, - Can either not receive, or can repel. 22O PARADISE LOST. [Book IX.-285–318. His fraud is, then, thy fear; which plain infers Thy equal fear, that my firm faith and love Can by his fraud be shaken or seduced: Thoughts, which how found they harbour in thy breast, Adam, misthought of her to thee so dear 2 - To whom, with healing words, Adam replied: Daughter of God and Man, immortal Eve For such thou art, from sin and blame entire; Not diffident of thee do I dissuade Thy absence from my sight, but to avoid The attempt itself, intended by our foe. For he who tempts, though in vain, at least asperses The tempted with dishonour foul, supposed Not incorruptible of faith, not proof Against temptation. Thou thyself, with scorn And anger wouldst resent the offered wrong, Though ineffectual found; misdeem not, then, If such affront I labour to avert - From thee alone, which on us both at once The enemy, though bold, will hardly dare, Or daring, first on me the assault shall light. Nor thou his malice and false guile contemn; Subtle he needs must be, who could seduce Angels. Nor think superfluous others' aid. I, from the influence of thy looks, receive Access in every virtue. In thy sight More wise, more watchful, stronger, if need were Of outward strength; while shame, thou looking on, Shame to be overcome or over-reached, Would utmost vigour raise, and raised, unite. Why shouldst not thou like sense within thee feel When I am present, and thy trial choose With me, best witness of thy virtue tried ? So spake domestic Adam in his care, BOOK IX.-319-352.] PARADISE LOST. - 22 I And matrimonial love. But Eve, who thought Less attributed to her faith sincere, Thus her reply with accent sweet renewed: If this be our condition, thus to dwell In narrow circuit straitened by a foe, Subtle or violent, we not endued Single with like defence, wherever met, How are we happy, still in fear of harm 2 But harm precedes not sin. Only our foe, Tempting, affronts us with his foul esteem Of our integrity: his foul esteem Sticks no dishonour on our front, but turns Foul on himself; then wherefore shunned or feared By us, who rather double honour gain From his surmise proved false, find peace within, Favour from Heaven, our witness, from the event. And what is faith, love, virtue, unassayed Alone, without exterior help sustained 2 Let us not, then, suspect our happy state Left so imperfect by the Maker wise, As not secure to single or combined. Frail is our happiness, if this be so; And Eden were no Eden, thus exposed. To whom thus Adam fervently replied: O woman, best are all things as the will Of God ordained them. His creating hand Nothing imperfect, or deficient, left Of all that he created, much less man, Or aught that might his happy state secure, Secure from outward force. Within himself The danger lies, yet lies within his power: Against his will he can receive no harm. But God left free the will, for what obeys Reason is free; and reason he made right, 222 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK IX.--353–386. But bid her well be ware, and still erect, Lest, by some fair-appearing good surprised, She dictate false, and misinform the will To do what God expressly hath forbid. Not then mistrust, but tender love, enjoins, That I should mind thee oft, and mind thou me. Firm we subsist, yet possible to swerve, Since reason not impossibly may meet Some specious object by the foe suborned, And fall into deception unaware, Not keeping strictest watch, as she was warned. Seek not temptation, then, which to avoid Were better, and most likely if from me Thou sever not ; trial will come unsought. Wouldst thou approve thy constancy, approve First thy obedience; the other who can know 2 Not seeing thee attempted, who attest ? But, it thou think trial unsought may find Us both securer than thus warned thou seemest, Go; for thy stay, not free, absents thee more; Go in thy native innocence, rely On what thou hast of virtue; summon all: For God towards thee hath done His part, do thine. So spake the patriarch of mankind; but Eve Persisted; yet submiss, though last, replied: With thy permission, then, and thus forewarned Chiefly by what thy own last reasoning words Touched only, that our trial, when least sought, May find us both, perhaps, far less prepared, The willinger I go, nor much expect A foe so proud will first the weaker seek; So bent, the more shall shame him his repulse Thus saying, from her husband's hand her hand Soft she withdrew, and, like a wood-nymph light, Book IX.-387-417.] PARADISE LOST. 223 Oread, or Dryad, or of Delia's train,' Betook her to the groves—but Delia's self, In gait surpassed, and goddess-like deport, Though not as she with bow and quiver armed, But with such gardening tools as art, yet rude, Guiltless of fire, had formed, or Angels brought. To Pales,” or Pomona, thus adorned, Likest she seemed—Pomona, when she fled Vertumnus, or to Ceres in her prime, Yet virgin of Proserpina from Jove. Her long, with ardent look, his eye pursued Delighted, but desiring more her stay. Oft he to her his charge of quick return Repeated ; she to him as oft engaged To be returned by noon amid the bower, And all things in best order to invite Noontide repast, or afternoon's repose. O much deceived, much failing, hapless Eve, Of thy presumed return event perverse ! Thou never from that hour in Paradise Found'st either sweet repast, or sound repose ! Such ambush, hid among sweet flowers and shades Waited, with hellish rancour imminent, To intercept thy way, or send thee back Despoiled of innocence, of faith, of bliss | For now, and since first break of dawn, the Fiend, Mere serpent in appearance, forth was come, And on his quest, where likeliest he might find The only two of mankind, but in them The whole included race, his purposed prey. In bower and field he sought where any tuft * Oread, or Dryad, or of Delia's train.—Female divinities with which the Greeks peopled the neighbourhood of their nvers, woods, and mountains. * Pales.—The Roman goddess of flocks—shepherds. * Pomona.-The female guardian of fruit trees. 224 PARADISE LOST. [Book ix–418-44s Of grove or garden-plot more pleasant lay, Their tendance, or plantation for delight; By fountain or by shady rivulet . - He sought them both, but wished his hap might find Eve separate; he wished, but not with hope Of what so seldom chanced ; when to his wish, Beyond his hope, Eve separate he spies, Veiled in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood, Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round About her glowed, oft stooping to support Each flower of tender stalk, whose head, though gay Carnation, purple, azure, or specked with gold, Hung drooping, unsustained ; then she upstays Gently with myrtle band, mindless the while Herself, though fairest unsupported flower, From her best prop so far, and storm so nigh. Nearer he drew, and many a walk traversed Of stateliest covert, cedar, pine, or palm ; Then voluble and bold;" now hid, now seen Among thick woven arborets, and flowers Imbordered on each bank, the hand of Eve: Spot more delicious than those gardens feigned Or of revived Adonis,” or renowned - Alcinous,” host of old Laertes' son, - Or that, not mystic," where the sapient king Held dalliance with his fair Egyptian spouse. Much he the place admired, the person more: As one who, long in populous city pent, Where houses thick, and sewers, annoy the air, Forth issuing on a summer's morn, to breathe Among the pleasant villages and farms * Voluble and bold.—Curved and confident. g * Adonis.--T radition made Adonis to delight in a beautiful garden. - * Alcinous.- Alcinous was a son of Neptune, happy in his rule over a portion of the island of Scheria * Wot mystic —This reference shows the sense in which Milton understood the Song of Solomon. and many a walk traversed y Nearer he drew Of stateliest covert, cedar, pine, or palm. Aook /X., lines 434, 435. ºlº BOOK IX. —449–480.] PARADISE LOST. - 225 Adjoined, from each thing met conceives delight; The smell of grain, or tedded grass' or kine, Or dairy, each rural sight, each rural sound; If chance, with nymph-like step, fair virgin pass, What pleasing seemed, for her now pleases more, She most, and in her look sums all delight. Such pleasure took the serpent to behold This flowery plat, the sweet recess of Eve Thus early, thus alone; her heavenly form Angelic, but more soft, and feminine, Her graceful innocence, her every air Of gesture, or least action, overawed His malice, and with rapine sweet bereaved His fierceness of the fierce intent it brought. That space the evil one abstracted stood From his own evil, and for the time remained Stupidly good; of enmity disarmed, Of guile, of hate, of envy, of revenge. But the hot hell that always in him burns, Though in mid heaven, soon ended his delight, And tortures him now more, the more he sees Of pleasure, not for him ordained: then soon Fierce hate he recollects,” and all his thoughts Of mischief gratulating,” thus excites: Thoughts, whither have ye led me! With what sweet Compulsion thus transported, to forget What hither brought us 2 Hate, not love; nor hope Of Paradise for Hell, hope here to taste Of pleasure, but all pleasure to destroy, Save what is in destroying ; other joy To me is lost. Then, let me not let pass Occasion which now smiles; behold alone * Tedded grass.-Grass cast about newly cut. * Fierce hate he recollects.-Recalls, rallies. * Gratulating.—Rejoicing in. 2 D 226 PARADISE LOST. [Book IX.-481–510. The woman, opportune to all attempts, Her husband, for I view far round, not nigh, Whose higher intellectual more I shun, And strength, of courage haughty, and of limb Heroic built, though of terrestrial mould; Foe not informidable, exempt from wound, I not; so much hath hell debased, and pain Enfeebled me, to what I was in heaven. She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods ! Not terrible, though terror be in love And beauty, not approached by stronger hate, Hate stronger, under show of love well feigned, The way which to her ruin now I tend. So spake the enemy of mankind enclosed - In serpent, inmate bad, and toward Eve Addressed his way: not with indented wave, Prone on the ground, as since; but on his rear, Circular base of rising folds, that towered Fold above fold, a surging maze; his head Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes; With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass Floated redundant. Pleasing was his shape, And lovely; never since of serpent-kind Lovelier; not those that in Illyria changed Hermione and Cadmus,' or the god In Epidaurus;* nor to which transformed Ammonian Jove,” or Capitoline was seen; He, with Olympias, this, with her who bore Scipio, the height of Rome. With tract oblique * Hermione and Cadmus.--Fabled as changed into serpents. * Epidaurus.--Another name for AEsculapius, the god of physic, who, being sent for to Rome in the time of a plague was said to have entered the city in the form of a serpent. * Ammonian jove.—Said to have conversed with his mother Olympia in the form of a serpent—tne inatron who, as the mother of Scipio Africanus, raised Rome to its height of greatness. Book IX.-511–542.] PARADISE LOST. 227 At first, as one who sought access, but feared To interrupt, sidelong he works his way. As when a ship, by skilful steersman wrought, Nigh river's mouth or foreland, where the wind Veers oft, as oft so steers, and shifts her sail: So varied he, and of his tortuous train Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve, To lure her eye. She, busied, heard the sound Of rustling leaves, but minded not, as used To such disport before her through the field, From every beast, more duteous at her call, Than at Circean call the herd disguised." He, bolder now, uncalled before her stood, But as in gaze admiring: oft he bowed His turret crest, and sleek enamelled neck, Fawning; and licked the ground whereon she trod. His gentle dumb expression turned at length The eye of Eve to mark his play; he, glad Of her attention gained, with serpent tongue Organic, or impulse of vocal air, His fraudulent temptation thus began : O Wonder not, sovereign mistress, if, perhaps, Thou canst, who art sole wonder; much less arm Thy looks, the heaven of mildness, with disdain, Displeased that I approach thee thus, and gaze Insatiate, I thus single, nor have feared Thy awful brow, more awful thus retired. - Fairest resemblance of thy Maker fair, Thee all things living gaze on, all things thine By gift, and thy celestial beauty adore, With ravishment beheld ! there best beheld, Where universally admired. But here, * At Circean call the herd disguised—In allusion to Circe, who was said to have turned men into beasts. (Ovid. “Met.” xiv. 45.) 228 PARADISE LOST. [Book IX-543–574 In this enclosure wild, these beasts among, Beholders rude, and shallow to discern Half what in thee is fair, one man except, Who sees thee —and what is one —who shouldst be seen A goddess among gods, adored and served By Angels numberless, thy daily train. So glozed the tempter, and his proem tuned ; Into the heart of Eve his words made way, Though at the voice much marvelling : at length, Not unamazed, she thus in answer spake : What may this mean 2 language of man, pronounced By tongue of brute, and human sense expressed The first, at least, of these, I thought denied To beasts, whom God, on their creation-day, Created mute to all articulate sound; The latter I demur ;' for in their looks Much reason, and in their actions, oft appears. Thee, serpent, subtlest beast of all the field I knew, but not with human voice endued; Redouble, then, this miracle, and say, How camest thou speakable of mute, and how To me so friendly grown, above the rest Of brutal kind, that daily are in sight 2 - Q Say, for such wonder claims attention due. To whom the guileful tempter thus replied : Empress of this fair world, resplendent Eve Easy to me it is to tell thee all What thou commandest, and right thou shouldst be obeyed. I was at first as other beasts that graze The trodden herb, of abject thoughts and low, As was my food; nor aught but food discerned, Or sex, and apprehended nothing high : * The latter / demur.—Question, doubt. Book IX.-575–608.] - PARADISE LOST. 229 Till, on a day roving the field, I chanced A goodly tree far distant to behold, Loaden with fruit of fairest colours mixed, Ruddy and gold. I nearer drew to gaze; When from the boughs a savoury odour blown, Grateful to appetite, more pleased my sense Than smell of sweetest fennel, or the teats Of ewe or goat dropping with milk at even, Unsucked of lamb or kid, that tend their play. To satisfy the sharp desire I had Of tasting those fair apples, I resolved Not to defer; hunger and thirst at once, Powerful persuaders, quickened at the scent Of that alluring fruit, urged me so keen. About the mossy trunk I wound me soon ; For, high from ground, the branches would require Thy utmost reach, or Adam's : round the tree, All other beasts that saw, with like desire Longing and envying stood, but could not reach. Amid the tree now got, where plenty hung Tempting, so nigh, to pluck and eat my fill I spared not ; for such pleasure, till that hour, At feed or fountain, never had I found. Sated at length, ere long I might perceive Strange alteration in me, to degree Of reason in my inward powers, and speech Wanted not long, though to this shape retained. Thenceforth to speculations high or deep I turned my thoughts, and with capacious mind Considered all things visible in heaven, Or earth, or middle; all things fair and good. But all that fair and good in thy divine Semblance, and in thy beauty's heavenly ray, United I beheld : no fair to thine 23O PARADISE LOST. [BOOK IX. —609-642. Equivalent or second which compelled Me thus, though importune perhaps, to come And gaze, and worship thee, of right declared Sovereign of creatures, universal dame ! So talked the spirited sly snake, and Eve, Yet more amazed, unwary thus replied: Serpent, thy overpraising leaves in doubt The virtue of that fruit, in thee first proved. But say, where grows the tree ? from hence how far ” For many are the trees of God that grow In Paradise, and various yet unknown To us; in such abundance lies our choice, As leaves a greater store of fruit untouched, Still hanging incorruptible, till men Grow up to their provision, and more hands Help to disburden nature of her birth. - To whom the wily adder, blithe and glad : Empress, the way is ready, and not long; Beyond a row of myrtles, on a flat, Fast by a fountain, one small thicket past Of blowing myrrh and balm : if thou accept My conduct, I can bring thee thither soon. Lead, then, said Eve. He, leading, swiftly rolled In tangles, and made intricate seem straight, To mischief swift. Hope elevates, and joy Brightens his crest. As when a wandering fire, Compact of unctuous vapour, which the night Condenses, and the cold environs round, Kindled through agitation to a flame, Which oft, they say, some evil spirit attends, Hovering and blazing with delusive light, Misleads the amazed night-wanderer from his way To bogs and mires, and oft through pond or pool, There swallowed up and lost, from succour far: Book IX.-643-676.] PARADISE LOST. - 23 1 So glistered the dire snake, and into fraud Led Eve, our credulous mother, to the tree Of prohibition, root of all our woe: Which, when she saw, thus to her guide she spake: Serpent, we might have spared our coming hither, Fruitless to me, though fruit be here to excess, - The credit of whose virtue rest with thee; Wondrous, indeed, if cause of such effects But of this tree we may not taste nor touch ; God so commanded, and left that command Sole daughter of his voice: the rest, we live Law to ourselves; our reason is our law. To whom the tempter guilefully replied: Indeed hath God then said that of the fruit Of all these garden-trees ye shall not eat, Yet lords declared of all in earth or air To whom thus Eve, yet sinless: Of the fruit Of each tree in the garden we may eat: But of the fruit of this fair tree amidst The garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat Thereof, nor shall ye touch it, lest ye die. She scarce had said, though brief, when now more bold The tempter, but, with show of zeal and love To man, and indignation at his wrong, - New part puts on ; and, as to passion moved, Fluctuates disturbed, yet comely, and in act Raised, as of some great matter to begin. As when, of old, some orator renowned, In Athens, or free Rome, where eloquence Flourished, since mute, to some great cause addressed, Stood in himself collected ; while each part, Motion, each act, won audience ere the tongue, Sometimes in height began, as no delay Of preface brooking, through his zeal of right: PARADISE LOST. ſBook IX.-677–710. So standing, moving, or to height up-grown, The tempter, all impassioned, thus began Oh, sacred, wise, and wisdom-giving plant, Mother of science now I feel thy power Within me clear; not only to discern Things in their causes, but to trace the ways Of highest agents, deemed however wise. Queen of this universe ! do not believe Those rigid threats of death. Ye shall not die. How should ye 2 By the fruit 2 It gives you life To knowledge. By the Threatener P Look on me, Me, who have touched and tasted, yet both live, And life more perfect have attained than fate Meant me, by venturing higher than my lot. Shall that be shut to Man, which to the beast Is open 2 Or will God incense his ire For such a petty trespass, and not praise Rather your dauntless virtue, whom the pain Of death denounced, whatever thing death be, Deterred not from achieving what might lead To happier life, knowledge of good and evil; Of good, how just 2 of evil, if what is evil Be real, why not known, since easier shunned 2 God, therefore, cannot hurt ye, and be just ; Not just, not God; not feared then, nor obeyed : Your fear itself of death removes the fear. Why, then, was this forbid 2 Why, but to awe; Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant, His worshippers. He knows that in the day Ye eat thereof, your eyes, that seem so clear, Yet are but dim, shall presently be then - Opened and cleared, and ye shall be as gods, Knowing both good and evil, as they know. That ye shall be as gods, since I as man, Book IX.-711–744.] PARADISE LOST. - 233 Internal man, is but proportion meet; I, of brute, human ; ye, of human, gods. So ye shall die, perhaps, by putting off Human, to put on gods; death to be wished, Though threatened, which no worse than this can bring. And what are gods, that man may not become As they, participating godlike food 2 The gods are first, and that advantage use On our belief, that all from them proceeds. I question it; for this fair earth I see, Warmed by the sun, producing every kind; Them, nothing. If they all things, who enclosed Knowledge of good and evil in this tree, That whoso eats thereof, forthwith attains Wisdom without their leave 2 And wherein lies The offence, that man should thus attain to know What can your knowledge hurt Him, or this tree Impart against His will, if all be His 2 Or is it envy and can envy dwell . In heavenly breasts These, these, and many more Causes import your need of this fair fruit. Goddess humane, reach, then, and freely taste. He ended ; and his words, replete with guile, Into her heart too easy entrance won : Fixed on the fruit she gazed, which to behold Might tempt alone; and in her ears the sound Yet rung of his persuasive words, impregned With reason, to her seeming, and with truth: Meanwhile the hour of noon drew on, and waked An eager appetite, raised by the smell So savoury of that fruit, which, with desire, Inclinable now grown to touch or taste, Solicited her longing eye. Yet first, Pausing awhile, thus to herself she mused : 234 PARADISE LOST. - [BOOK IX.-745-779 Great are thy virtues, doubtless, best of fruits, Though kept from Man, and worthy to be admired; Whose taste, too long forborne, at first assay Gave elocution to the mute, and taught The tongue, not made for speech, to speak thy praise. Thy praise He also, who forbids thy use, Conceals not from us, naming thee the tree Of knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil; Forbids us, then, to taste : but His forbidding Commends thee more, while it infers the good By thee communicated, and our want: For good unknown sure is not had ; or, had, And yet unknown, is as not had at all. In plain, then, what forbids He but to know, Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise ? Such prohibitions bind not. But, if death Bind us with after-bands, what profits, then, Our inward freedom ? In the day we eat Of this fair fruit, our doom is, we shall die How dies the serpent 2 He hath eaten, and lives. And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discerns, Irrational till then. For us alone Was death invented 2 Or to us denied This intellectual food, for beasts reserved 2 For beasts it seems; yet that one beast which first Hath tasted envies not, but brings with joy The good befallen him, author unsuspect, Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile. What fear I, then P Rather, what know to fear Under this ignorance of good or evil, Of God or death, of law or penalty 2 Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine, Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste, Of virtue to make wise: what hinders, then, To reach, and feed at once both body and mind 2 | . º | | º W º º É. §º/ % Back to the thicket slunk The guilty serpent. 2. 234 Aook /X., ſines 784, 785. g Book IX.-780–813.] PARADISE LOST. 235 So saying, her rash hand, in evil hour, Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she ate | Earth felt the wound, and Nature, from her Seat, Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe, That all was lost. Back to the thicket slunk The guilty serpent ; and well might, for Eve, Intent now only on her taste, nought else Regarded ; such delight till then, as seemed, In fruit she never tasted, whether true Or fancied so, through expectation high Of knowledge; nor was godhead from her thought. Greedily she engorged without restraint, And knew not eating death. Satiate at length, And heightened as with wine, jocund and boon, Thus to herself she pleasingly began : s O sovereign, virtuous, precious of all trees In Paradise ! of operation blest To sapience, hitherto obscured, infamed, And thy fair fruit let hang, as to no end Created; but henceforth my early care, Not without song, each morning, and due praise, Shall tend thee, and the fertile burden ease Of thy full branches, offered free to all; Till, dieted by thee, I grow mature In knowledge, as the gods, who all things know ; Though others envy what they cannot give : For, had the gift been theirs, it had not here Thus grown. Experience, next, to thee I owe, Best guide: not following thee, I had remained In ignorance; thou openest wisdom's way, And givest access, though secret she retire. And I, perhaps, am secret. Heaven is high, High, and remote to see from thence distinct Each thing on earth; and other care, perhaps, 236 PARADISE LOST. [Book IX.-814–847. May have diverted from continual watch Our great Forbidder, safe with all his spies About him. But to Adam in what sort Shall I appear 2 Shall I to him make known As yet my change, and give him to partake Full happiness with me, or rather not, - But keep the odds of knowledge in my power, Without copartner 2 so to add what wants In female sex, the more to draw his love, And render me more equal, and, perhaps, A thing not undesirable, sometimes Superior; for, inferior, who is free ? This may be well. But what if God have seen, And death ensue 2 Then I shall be no more And Adam, wedded to another Eve, Shall live with her, enjoying ; I extinct : A death to think | Confirmed, then, I resolve, Adam shall share with me in bliss or woe; So dear I love him, that with him all deaths I could endure—without him live no life. So saying, from the tree her step she turned, But first low reverence done, as to the power That dwelt within, whose presence had infused Into the plant sciential sap, derived From nectar, drink of gods. Adam, the while, Waiting, desirous her return, had wove Of choicest flowers a garland, to adorn Her tresses, and her rural labours crown, As reapers oft are wont their harvest queen. Great joy he promised to his thoughts, and new Solace in her return, so long delayed : Yet oft his heart, divine of something ill, Misgave him ; he the faltering measure felt, And forth to meet her went, the way she took Book IX—848–881.] - PARADISE LOST. 237 That morn when first they parted. By the tree Of knowledge he must pass, there he her met, Scarce from the tree returning ; in her hand A bough of fairest fruit, that downy smiled, New gathered, and ambrosial smell diffused. To him she hasted ; in her face excuse Came prologue, and apology too prompt; Which, with bland words at will, she thus addressed : Hast thou not wondered, Adam, at my stay ? Thee I have missed, and thought it long, deprived Thy presence; agony of love till now Not felt, nor shall be twice; for never more Mean I to try, what rash untried I sought, The pain of absence from thy sight. But strange Hath been the cause, and wonderful to hear. e This tree is not, as we are told, a tree Of danger tasted, nor to evil unknown Opening the way, but of divine effect To open eyes, and make them gods who taste; And hath been tasted such. The serpent, wise, Or not restrained as we, or not obeying, Hath eaten of the fruit, and is become, Not dead, as we are threatened, but thenceforth Endued with human voice and human sense, Reasoning to admiration, and with me Persuasively hath so prevailed, that I Have also tasted, and have also found The effects to correspond ; opener mine eyes Dim erst, dilated spirits, ampler heart, And growing up to Godhead ; which for thee Chiefly I sought; without thee can despise. For bliss, as thou hast part, to me is bliss ; Tedious, unshared with thee, and odious soon. Thou, therefore, also taste, that equal lot 238 PARADISE LOST - - [Book 12C-882–916. May join us—equal joy as equal love; Lest, thou not tasting, different degree Disjoin us, and I then too late renounce Deity for thee, when fate will not permit. Thus Eve, with countenance blithe, her story told; But in her cheek distemper flushing glowed. On the other side, Adam, soon as he heard The fatal trespass done by Eve, amazed, Astonied stood and blank, while horror chill Ran through his veins, and all his joints relaxed; From his slack hand the garland, wreathed for Eve, Down dropt, and all the faded roses shed; Speechless he stood and pale; till thus, at length, First to himself, he inward silence broke: . Oh, fairest of creation, last and best Of all God's works creature, in whom excelled Whatever can to sight or thought be formed, Holy, divine, good, amiable, or sweet ! How art thou lost ! how on a sudden lost, Defaced, deflowered, and now to death devote Rather, how hast thou yielded to transgress The strict forbiddance—how to violate The sacred fruit forbidden 2 Some cursed fraud Of enemy hath beguiled thee, yet unknown, And me with thee hath ruined; for with thee Certain my resolution is to die. How can I live without thee ? How forego Thy sweet converse, and love so dearly joined, To live again in these wild woods forlorn ? Should God create another Eve, and I Another rib afford, yet loss of thee Would never from my heart; no, no ! I feel The link of nature draw me, flesh of flesh, Bone of my bone thou art, and from thy state Mine never shall be parted, bliss or woe. Book U'X.—917—956.] PARADISE LOST. - . 239 So having said, as one from sad dismay Recomforted, and after thoughts disturbed, Submitting to what seemed remediless, Thus, in calm mood his words to Eve he turned: Bold deed thou hast presumed, adventurous Eve, And peril great provoked, who thus hast dared, Had it been only coveting to eye That sacred fruit, sacred to abstinence, Much more to taste it, under ban to touch. But past, who can recall, or done, undo 2 Not God omnipotent, nor fate. Yet so zºº Perhaps thou shalt not die, perhaps the fact Is not so heinous now, foretasted fruit, Profaned first by the serpent, by him first Made common, and unhallowed, ere our taste, Nor yet on him found deadly; he yet lives; Lives, as thou saidst, and gains to live, as Man, Higher degree of life; inducement strong To us, as likely, tasting, to attain - Proportional ascent; which cannot be But to be gods, or angels, demi-gods. Nor can I think that God, Creator wise, Though threatening, will in earnest so destroy Us, his prime creatures, dignified so high. Set over all his works; which, in our fall, For us created, needs with us must fail, Dependent made ; so God shall uncreate, Be frustrate, do, undo, and labour lose: Not well conceived of God, who, though his power Creation could repeat, yet would be loth Us to abolish, lest the Adversary - Triumph and say: Fickle their state, whom God Most favours; who can please Him long 2 Me first He ruined, now mankind; whom will he next 2 24o PARADISE LOST. [Book IX.-951—984, Matter of scorn, not to be given the Foe. However, I with thee have fixed my lot, Certain to undergo like doom: if death Consort with thee death is to me as life: So forcible within my heart I feel The bond of nature draw me to my own ; My own in thee, for what thou art is mine; Our state cannot be severed; we are one, One flesh; to lose thee were to lose myself. So Adam ; and thus Eve to him replied : Oh, glorious trial of exceeding love, Illustrious evidence, example high Engaging me to emulate; but, short Of thy perfection, how shall I attain 2 Adam from whose dear side I boast me sprung, And gladly of our union hear thee speak, One heart, one soul in both ; whereof good proof This day affords, declaring thee resolved, Rather than death, or aught than death more dread, Shall separate us, linked in love so dear, To undergo with me one guilt, one crime, If any be, of tasting this fair fruit, Whose virtue—for of good still good proceeds, Direct, or by occasion—hath presented This happy trial of thy love, which else So eminently never had been known. Were it I thought death menaced would ensue This my attempt, I would sustain alone The worst, and not persuade thee; rather die Deserted, than oblige thee with a fact Pernicious to thy peace, chiefly assured Remarkably so late of thy so true, So faithful love, unequalled ; but I feel Far otherwise the event; not death, but life BOOK IX.—985-1,018.] - PARADISE LOST. - 241 Augmented, opened eyes, new. hopes, new joys, Taste so divine, that what of sweet before Hath touched my sense, flat seems to this, and harsh. On my experience, Adam, freely taste, And fear of death deliver to the winds. So saying, she embraced him, and for joy Tenderly wept ; much won, that he his love Had so ennobled, as of choice to incur Divine displeasure for her sake, or death. In recompense—for such compliance bad Such recompense best merits, from the bough She gave him of that fair enticing fruit With liberal hand: he scrupled not to eat, Against his better knowledge: not deceived, But fondly overcome with female charm. Earth trembled from her entrails, as again In pangs ; and nature gave a second groan; Sky loured, and, muttering thunder, some sad drops Wept at completing of the mortal sin Original; while Adam took no thought Eating his fill; nor Eve to iterate Her former trespass feared, the more to soothe Him with her loved society; that now, As with new wine intoxicated both, They swim in mirth, and fancy that they feel Divinity within them breeding wings, Wherewith to scorn the earth. But that false fruit Far other operation first displayed, Carnal desire inflaming: he on Eve Began to cast lascivious eyes; she him As wantonly repaid ; in lust they burn, Till Adam thus 'gan Eve to dalliance move: Eve, now I see thou art exact of taste, And elegant, of sapience no small part: 242 PARADISE LOST. 1Book IX-1, oig-1,052. Since to each meaning savour we apply, And palate call judicious; I the praise Yield thee, so well this day thou hast purveyed. Much pleasure we have lost, while we abstained From this delightful fruit, nor known till now True relish, tasting. If such pleasure be In things to us forbidden, it might be wished, For this one tree had been forbidden ten. But come, so well refreshed, now let us play, As meet is, after such delicious fare; For never did thy beauty, since the day I saw thee first, and wedded thee, adorned With all perfections, so inflame my sense With ardour to enjoy thee, fairer now Than ever; bounty of this virtuous tree So said he, and forbore not glance or toy Of amorous intent, well understood Of Eve, whose eye darted contagious fire. Her hand he seized; and to a shady bank, Thick overhead with verdant roof embowered, He led her, nothing loth ; flowers were the couch, Pansies, and violets, and asphodel, And hyacinth ; earth's freshest, softest lap. There they their fill of love and love's disport Took largely, of their mutual guilt the seal, The solace of their sin; till dewy sleep Oppressed them, wearied with their amorous play. Soon as the force of that fallacious fruit, That with exhilarating vapour bland, About their spirits had played, and inmost powers Made err, was now exhaled; and grosser sleep, Bred of unkindly fumes, with conscious dreams Encumbered, now had left them; up they rose As from unrest, and, each the other viewing, Book IX—ios3-1986.] PARADISE LOST. 243 Soon found their eyes how opened, and their minds How darkened. Innocence, that, as a veil, Had shadowed them from knowing ill, was gone; Just confidence, and native righteousness, Asd honour, from about them, naked left To guilty shame: he covered, but his robe Uncovered more. So rose the Danite strong, Herculean Samson, from the harlot-lap Of Philistean Dalilah, and waked Shorn of his strength; they, destitute and bare Of all their virtue, silent, and in face Confounded; long they sat, as stricken mute; Till Adam, though not less than Eve abashed, At length gave utterance to these words constrained: O Eve, in evil hour thou didst give ear To that false worm, of whomsoever taught To counterfeit man's voice; true in our fall, False in our promised rising; since our eyes Opened we find, indeed, and find we know Both good and evil; good lost, and evil got; Bad fruit of knowledge, if this be to know, Which leaves us naked thus, of honour void, Of innocence, of faith, of purity, - Our wonted ornaments now soiled and stained, And in our faces evident the signs Of foul concupiscence; whence evil store; Even shame, the last of evils; of the first Be sure then. How shall I behold the face Henceforth of God or Angel, erst with joy And rapture so oft beheld 2 Those heavenly shapes Will dazzle now this earthly, with their blaze Insufferably bright. O ! might I here In solitude live savage, in some glade Obscured, where highest woods, impenetrable 244 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK IX.-1,087–1,120. To star or sun light, spread their umbrage broad And brown as evening ! Cover me, ye pines Ye cedars, with innumerable boughs Hide me, where I may never see them more ! But let us now, as in bad plight, devise e What best may, for the present, serve to hide The parts of each from other, that seem most To shame obnoxious, and unseemliest seen. Some tree, whose broad smooth leaves, together sewed, And girded on our loins, may cover round Those middle parts; that this new-comer, Shame, There sit not, and reproach us as unclean. So counselled he, and both together went Into the thickest wood; there soon they chose The fig-tree, not that kind for fruit renowned, But such as, at this day, to Indians known, In Malabar or Decan spreads her arms, Branching so broad and long, that in the ground The bended twigs take root, and daughters grow About the mother-tree, a pillared shade, - High over-arched, and echoing walks between ; There oft the Indian herdsman, shunning heat, Shelters in cool, and tends his pasturing herds At loop-holes cut through thickest shade. Those leaves They gathered, broad as Amazonian targe, And, with what skill they had, together sewed, To gird their waist : vain covering, if to hide Their guilt and dreaded shame ! Oh, how unlike To that first naked glory ! Such, of late, Columbus found the American, so girt With feather'd cincture; naked else, and wild Among the trees on isles and woody shores. Thus fenced, and, as they thought, their shame in part Covered, but not at rest or ease of mind, § \ \\ º º \\ º º N \\ | 'll º - º º | | | º º |||||||| º ſ º!" º | | º % | | º "| | º | º º | | º º |\\ º } w º º N Wº º \º º º º | - T - - == == - ==&sºs=== Ess--> - *E=Ess -- - --- - - - - - º- - Sºs - ==s== Esº- |=sºs-E= =>SSSsese- == E- s s=y- Sº - ºs-SS –2 A. 244. Nor only tears Rained at their eyes, but high winds worse within Began to rise. Book IX., lines II.21–1123. Book ix–1,121-1,154] . . PARADISE LOST. º 245 They sat them down to weep. Nor only tears Rained at their eyes, but high winds worse within Began to rise; high passions, anger, hate, - Mistrust, suspicion, discord, and shook sore Their inward state of mind, calm region once, And full of peace, now tost and turbulent. For understanding ruled not, and the will Heard not her lore; both in subjection now To sensual appetite, who, from beneath, Usurping over sovereign reason, claimed Superior sway. From thus distempered breast, Adam, estranged in look and altered style, Speech intermitted thus to Eve renewed: Would thou hadst hearkened to my words, and stayed With me, as I besought thee, when that strange Desire of wandering, this unhappy morn, I know not whence possessed thee; we had then Remained still happy; not as now, despoiled Of all our good; shamed, naked, miserable ! Let none henceforth seek needless cause to approve The faith they owe ; when earnestly they seek Such proof, conclude they then begin to fail. To whom, soon moved with touch of blame, thus Eve: What words have passed thy lips, Adam, severe 2 Imputest thou that to my default, or will Of wandering, as thou callest it, which who knows But might as ill have happened thou being by, Or to thyself, perhaps ? Hadst thou been there, Or here the attempt, thou couldst not have discerned Fraud in the serpent, speaking as he spake; No ground of enmity between us known, Why he should mean me ill, or seek to harm. Was I to have never parted from thy side 2 As good have grown there still, a lifeless rib. 246 PARADISE LOST. [Book IX-1,155-1,189. Being as I am, why didst not thou, the head, Command me absolutely not to go, - Going into such danger, as thou saidst 2 Too facile, then, thou didst not much gainsay: Nay, didst permit, approve, and fair dismiss. Hadst thou been firm and fixed in thy dissent, Neither had I transgressed, nor thou with me. To whom, then first incensed, Adam replied: Is this the love, is this the recompense Of mine to thee, ingrateful Eve, expressed Immutable when thou wert lost, not I ; Who might have lived, and 'joyed immortal bliss, Yet willingly chose rather death with thee? - And am I now upbraided as the cause Of thy transgressing 2 Not enough severe, It seems, in my restraint : what could I more ? I warned thee, I admonished thee, foretold The danger, and the lurking Enemy That lay in wait; beyond this had been force, And force upon free-will hath here no place. But confidence then bore thee on ; secure Either to meet no danger, or to find Matter of glorious trial; and, perhaps, I also erred in overmuch admiring What seemed in thee so perfect, that I thought No evil durst attempt thee. But I rue That error now, which is become my crime, And thou the accuser. Thus it shall befall Him who, to worth in woman overtrusting, Lets her will rule: restraint she will not brook: And left to herself, if evil thence ensue, She first his weak indulgence will accuse. Thus they in mutual accusation spent The fruitless hours, but neither self-condemning; And of their vain contest appeared no end. BOOK X. MAN's transgression known, the guardian angels forsake Paradise, and return up to heaven to approve their vigilance, and are approved ; God declaring that the entrance of Satan could not be by them prevented. He sends His Son to judge the transgressors; who descends, and gives sentence accordingly; then, in pity, clothes them both, and re-ascends. Sin and Death, sitting till then at the gates of hell, by wondrous sympathy feeling the success of Satan in this new world, and the sin by man there committed, resolve to sit no longer confined in hell, but to follow Satan, their sire, up to the place of man. To make the way easier from hell to this world to and fro, they pave a broad highway or bridge over Chaos, according to the track that Satan first made ; then, preparing for earth, they meet him, proud of his success, returning to hell ; their mutual gratulation. Satan arrives at Pandemonium ; in full assembly relates, with boasting, his success against man; instead of applause is entertained with a general hiss by all his audience, transformed, with himself also, suddenly into serpents, according to his doom given in Paradise : then, deluded with a show of the forbidden tree springing up before them, they, greedily reaching to take of the fruit, chew dust and bitter ashes. The proceedings of Sin and Death ; God foretells the final victory of His Son over them, and the renewing of all things; but, for the present, commands His angels to make several alterations in the heavens and elements. Adam, more and more perceiving his fallen condition, heavily bewails, rejects the condolement of Eve; she persists, and at length appeases him : then, to evade the curse likely to fall on their offspring, proposes to Adam violent ways, which he approves not; but, conceiving better hope, puts her in mind of the late promise made them, that her seed should be revenged on the serpent; and exhorts her, with him, to seek peace of the offended Deity, by repentance and supplication. EANWHILE the heinous and despiteful act Of Satan done in Paradise; and how He, in the serpent, had perverted Eve, Her husband she, to taste the fatal fruit, - Was known in heaven—for what can 'scape the eye Of God all-seeing, or deceive His heart - Omniscient 2 who, in all things wise and just, Hindered not Satan to attempt the mind Of man, with strength entire, and free-will armed Complete to have discovered and repulsed Whatever wiles of foe or seeming friend. - For still they knew, and ought to have still remembered, The high injunction, not to taste that fruit, Whoever tempted; which they, not obeying, Incurred—what could they less 2—the penalty; And manifold in sin, deserved to fall. Up into heaven from Paradise, in haste, The Angelic guards ascended, mute and sad, 248 PARADISE LOST. - [BOOK X.— 19-52. For Man; for of his state by this they knew, Much wondering how the subtle Fiend had stolen Entrance unseen. Soon as the unwelcome news From earth arrived at heaven-gate, displeased All were who heard; dim sadness did not spare That time celestial visages, yet, mixed With pity, violated not their bliss. About the new-arrived, in multitudes, The ethereal people ran, to hear and know How all befell. They, towards the throne supreme, Accountable, made haste, to make appear, With righteous plea, their utmost vigilance, And easily approved ; when the Most High, Eternal Father, from his secret cloud Amidst, in thunder uttered thus his voice: - Assembled Angels, and ye Powers returned From unsuccessful charge, be not dismayed, Nor troubled at these tidings from the Earth, Which your sincerest care could not prevent; Foretold so lately what would come to pass, When first this tempter crossed the gulf from hell. I told ye then he should prevail, and speed - On his bad errand ; man should be seduced, And flattered out of all, believing lies - Against his Maker; no decree of mine Concurring to necessitate his fall, Or touch with lightest moment of impulse His free-will, to her own inclining left In even scale. But fallen he is ; and now What rests, but that the mortal sentence pass On his transgression, death denounced that day? Which he presumes already vain and void, Because not yet inflicted, as he feared, - By some immediate stroke; but soon shall find Book x- 53–86.] - PARADISE LOST. 249 Forbearance no acquittance, ere day end. Justice shall not return, as bounty, scorned. - But whom send I to judge them 2 Whom but Thee, Vicegerent Son? To thee I have transferred All judgment, whether in Heaven, or Earth, or Hell. Easy it may be seen that I intend - Mercy colleague with justice, sending Thee, Man's Friend, his Mediator, his designed Both Ransom and Redeemer voluntary, And, destined Man himself, to judge man fallen. So spake the Father; and, unfolding bright Toward the right hand his glory, on the Son Blazed forth unclouded deity: He full Resplendent all his Father manifest Expressed, and thus divinely answered mild: Father Eternal, thine is to decree; Mine, both in heaven and earth, to do thy will Supreme; that thou in me, thy Son beloved, Mayest ever rest well pleased. I go to judge On earth these thy transgressors; but thou knowst, Whoever judged, the worst on me must light, When time shall be ; for so I undertook Before Thee ; and, not repenting, this obtain Of right, that I may mitigate their doom On me derived ; yet I shall temper so Justice with mercy, as may illustrate most Them fully satisfied, and thee appease. Attendance none shall need, nor train, where none Are to behold the judgment, but the judged, Those two: the third, best absent, is condemned, Convict by flight, and rebel to all law: Conviction to the serpent none belongs. Thus saying, from his radiant seat he rose Of high collateral glory. Him, Thrones and Powers, 25O PARADISE LOST. [Book X-87-12o. Princedoms, and Dominations ministrant, Accompanied to Heaven-gate; from whence Eden, and all the coast, in prospect lay. Down he descended straight; the speed of Gods Time counts not, though with swiftest minutes winged. Now was the sun in western cadence low From noon and gentle airs, due at their hour, To fan the earth, now waked, and usher in The evening cool; when He, from wrath more cool, Came, the mild judge and intercessor both, To sentence Man. The voice of God they heard Now walking in the garden, by soft winds - Brought to their ears, while day declined. They heard, And from His presence hid themselves among The thickest trees, both man and wife; till God, Approaching, thus to Adam called aloud: Where art thou, Adam, wont with joy to meet My coming, seen far off? I miss thee here, Not pleased, thus entertained with solitude, Where obvious duty erewhile appeared unsought: Or come I less conspicuous, or what change Absents thee, or what chance detains 2 Come forth ! He came, and with him, Eve, more loath, though first To offend; discountenanced both, and discomposed; " Love was not in their looks, either to God, Or to each other; but apparent guilt, And shame, and perturbation, and despair; Anger, and obstinacy, and hate, and guile. Whence Adam, faltering long, thus answered brief: I heard thee in the garden, and of thy voice Afraid, being naked, hid myself. To whom The gracious judge, without revile, replied: My voice thou oft hast heard, and hast not feared, But still rejoiced; how is it now become . y id themselves among They heard p. 250. h And from his presence The thickest trees. Book X, lines 99-ror. BOOK X.—121-154.] PARADISE LOST. 25 I So dreadful to thee? That thou art naked, who Hath told thee? Hast thou eaten of the tree Whereof I gave thee charge thou shouldst not eat? To whom thus Adam, sore beset, replied: O Heaven! in evil strait this day I stand Before my judge; either to undergo Myself the total crime, or to accuse My other self, the partner of my life; Whose failing, while her faith to me remains, I should conceal, and not expose to blame, By my complaint; but strict necessity Subdues me, and calamitous constraint, Lest on my head both sin and punishment, However insupportable, be all Devolved; though, should I hold my peace, yet thou Wouldst easily detect what I conceal. This woman, whom thou madest to be my help, And gavest me as thy perfect gift, so good, So fit, so acceptable, so divine, That from her hand I could suspect no ill, And what she did, whatever in itself, Her doing seemed to justify the deed; She gave me of the tree, and I did eat. - To whom the sovereign Presence thus replied: Was she thy God, that her thou didst obey Before His voice P Or was she made thy guide, Superior, or but equal, that to her. * Thou didst resign thy manhood, and the place Wherein God set thee above her, made of thee, And for thee, whose perfection far excelled g Hers in all real dignity ? Adorned She was, indeed, and lovely, to attract Thy love, not thy subjection; and her gifts Were such as under government well seemed, 252 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK X.—155–186. Unseemly to bear rule, which was thy part And person, hadst thou known thyself aright. So having said, he thus to Eve in few : Say, woman, what is this which thou hast done? To whom sad Eve, with shame nigh overwhelmed, Confessing soon, yet not before her judge Bold or loguacious, thus abashed replied: The serpent me beguiled, and I did eat. - Which when the Lord God heard, without delay To judgment he proceeded on the accused Serpent, though brute, unable to transfer The guilt on him who made him instrument Of mischief, and polluted from the end Of his creation; justly then accursed, As vitiated in nature. More to know Concerned not man—since he no further knew— Nor altered his offence. Yet God at last To Satan, first in sin, his doom applied, Though in mysterious terms, judged as then best: And on the serpent thus his curse let fall: Because thou hast’ done this, thou art accursed Above all cattle, each beast of the field; - Upon thy belly grovelling thou shalt go, And dust shalt eat all the days of thy life. Between thee and the woman I will put Enmity, and between thine and her seed; Her seed shall bruise thy head, thou bruise his heel. So spake this oracle, then verified, When Jesus, Son of Mary, second Eve, Saw Satan fall, like lightning down from heaven, Prince of the air; then, rising from his grave, Spoiled Principalities and Powers, triumphed * 7%us to Eve in few.—In few words. * Because thou hast.—Gen. iii. 14, 15. Book X-187-218.] PARADISE LOST. 253. In open show; and, with ascension bright, Captivity led captive through the air, The realm itself of Satan, long usurped; Whom He shall tread at last under our feet, Even He, who now foretold his fatal bruise. And to the woman thus his sentence turned : Thy sorrow I will greatly multiply By thy conception; children thou shalt bring In sorrow forth; and to thy husband's will Thine shall submit, he over thee shall rule. . On Adam last thus judgment he pronounced : Because thou hast hearkened to the voice of thy wife, And eaten of the tree concerning which I charged thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat thereof, Cursed is the ground for thy sake; thou in sorrow Shalt eat thereof all the days of thy life; Thorns, also, and thistles, it shall bring thee forth, Unbid, and thou shalt eat the herb of the field; In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, Till thou return unto the ground; for thou Out of the earth wast taken, know thy birth, For dust thou art, and shalt to dust return.' So judged he man, both Judge and Saviour sent, And the instant stroke of death, denounced that day, Removed far off. Then pitying how they stood Before him, naked to the air, that now - Must suffer change, disdained not to begin Thenceforth the form of servant to assume; As when he washed his servants' feet; so now As Father of his family, he clad Their nakedness with skins of beasts, or slain, Or, as the snake, with youthful coat repaid, * To dust return.—Gen. iii. 15—19. 254 PARADISE LOST. \ [BOOK X.–219–252. And thought not much to clothe his enemies. Nor he their outward only with the skins Of beasts, but inward nakedness, much more Opprobrious, with his robe of righteousness Arraying, covered from his Father's sight. To Him, with swift ascent, he up returned, Into his blissful bosom reassumed, In glory, as of old; to Him, appeased, All, though all-knowing, what had passed with Man Recounted, mixing intercession sweet Meanwhile, ere thus was sinned and judged on earth, Within the gates of hell sat Sin and Death, In counterview within the gates, that now Stood open wide, belching outrageous flame Far into Chaos, since the Fiend passed through, Sin opening; who thus now to Death began : O son, why sit we here, each other viewing Idly, while Satan, our great author, thrives In other worlds, and happier seat provides For us, his offspring dear 2 It cannot be But that success attends him ; if mishap, Ere this he had returned, with fury driven By his avengers; since no place like this Can fit his punishment, or their revenge. Methinks I feel new strength within me rise, Wings growing, and dominion given me large, Beyond this deep ; whatever draws me on, Or sympathy, or some connatural force, Powerful at greatest distance to unite, With secret amity, things of like kind, By secretest conveyance. Thou, my shade Inseparable, must with me along, For Death from Sin no power can separate. But lest the difficulty of passing back Book X-253–286.1 PARADISE LOST. 255 Stay his return, perhaps, over this gulf Impassable, impervious, let us try Adventurous work, yet to thy power and mine Not unagreeable, to found a path Over this main from Hell to that new World, Where Satan now prevails; a monument Of merit high to all the infernal host, Easing their passage hence, for intercourse, Or transmigration, as their lot shall lead, Nor can I miss the way, so strongly drawn By this new-felt attraction and instinct. Whom thus the meagre shadow answered soon : Go, whither fate, and inclination strong, Lead thee; I shall not lag behind, nor err The way, thou leading; such a scent I draw Of carnage, prey innumerable, and taste The savour of death from all things there that live; Nor shall I to the work thou enterprisest Be wanting, but afford thee equal aid. So saying, with delight he snuffed the smell “Of mortal change on earth. As when a flock Of ravenous fowl, though many a league remote, Against the day of battle, to a field, Where armies lie encamped, come flying, lured With scent of living carcases designed For death the following day, in bloody fight; So scented the grim feature, and upturned His nostril wide into the murky air, - Sagacious of his quarry from so far. Then both, from out Hell gates, into the waste Wide anarchy of Chaos, damp and dark, Flew diverse; and with power—their power was great— Hovering upon the waters, what they met, - - Solid or slimy, as in raging sea 256 PARADISE LOST. [Book X-287–316. Tossed up and down, together crowded drove, From each side shoaling towards the mouth of Hell:— As when two polar winds, blowing adverse & Upon the Cronian sea, together drive Mountains of ice, that stop the imagined way Beyond Petsora’ eastward, to the rich Cathaian coast.” The aggregated soil, Death, with his mace petrific, cold and dry, As with a trident smote, and fixed as firm As Delos, floating once;" the rest his look Bound with Gorgonian rigourº not to move; And with asphaltic slime, broad as the gate, Deep to the roots of Hell the gathered beach They fastened, and the mole immense wrought on, Over the foaming Deep, high-arched, a bridge Of length prodigious, joining to the wall Immovable of this now fenceless world, Forfeit to Death; from hence a passage broad, Smooth, easy, inoffensive, down to hell. So, if great things to small may be compared, Xerxes, the liberty of Greece to yoke, From Susa, his Memnonian palace high, Came to the sea, and, over Hellespont Bridging his way, Europe with Asia joined, And scourged with many a stroke the indignant waves. Now had they brought the work by wondrous art Pontifical, a ridge of pendent rock, Over the vexed abyss, following the track Of Satan to the self-same place where he First lighted from his wing, and landed safe tronian sea.—Name given to the Polar Seas. * Petsora.-A river descending to the Arctic Sea from the Ural mountains. * Cathaian coast.—China. - v. * * As Delos, floating once.—One of the Cyclades group of islands, in the AEgean Sea, which was said to have been a floating island, until Jupiter chained it to the bottom of the sea. 5 Gorgonian rigour.—See Book II., line 611, and Note 3. Book X.—317-348.] PARADISE LOST. 257 From out of Chaos, to the outside bare Of this round world. With pins of adamant And chains they made all fast, too fast they made And durable ! And now in little space The confines met of empyrean heaven And of this world ; and, on the left hand hell With long reach interposed; three several ways In sight, to each of these three places led. And now their way to earth they had descried, To Paradise first tending; when, behold Satan, in likeness of an angel bright, Betwixt the Centaur and the Scorpion' steering His zenith, while the sun in Aries rose, Disguised he came ; but those his children dear Their parent soon discerned, though in disguise. He, after Eve seduced, unminded slunk Into the wood fast by ; and changing shape To observe the sequel, saw his guileful act, By Eve, though all unweeting, seconded Upon her husband; saw their shame that sought Vain covertures. But when he saw descend The Son of God to judge them, terrified He fled; not hoping to escape, but shun The present; fearing, guilty, what His wrath Might suddenly inflict; that past, returned By night, and listening where the hapless pair Sat in their sad discourse, and various plaint, Thence gathered his own doom ; which understood Not instant, but of future time, with joy And tidings fraught, to hell he now returned, And at the brink of Chaos, near the foot Of this new wondrous pontifice, unhoped Centaur, Scorpion, Aries.—Signs in the Zodiac. 258 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK X.-349-382. Met, who to meet him came, his offspring dear. Great joy was at their meeting, and at sight Of that stupendous bridge his joy increased. Long he admiring stood, till Sin, his fair Enchanting daughter, thus the silence broke: O Parent, these are thy magnific deeds, Thy trophies which thou view'st as not thine own ; Thou art their author, and prime architect; For I no sooner in my heart divined— My heart, which by a secret harmony Still moves with thine, joined in connection sweet— That thou on earth hadst prospered, which thy looks Now also evidence, but straight I felt, Though distant from thee worlds between, yet felt That I must after thee, with this thy son; Such fatal consequence unites us three. Hell could no longer hold us in her bounds, Nor this unvoyageable gulf obscure Detain from following thy illustrious track. Thou hast achieved our liberty, confined Within Hell-gates till now ; thou us empowered To fortify thus far, and overlay, With this portentous bridge, the dark abyss. Thine now is all this world; thy virtue hath won What thy hands builded not ; thy wisdom gained, With odds, what war hath lost, and fully avenged Our foil in heaven. Here thou shalt monarch reign, There didst not. There let Him still victor sway, As battle hath adjudged ; from this new world Retiring, by his own doom alienated, And henceforth monarchy with thee divide Of all things, parted by the empyreal bounds, His quadrature, from thy orbicular world , Or try thee now more dangerous to his throne Book X.-383-416.] . . PARADISE LOST. . . 259 Whom thus the Prince of Darkness answered glad: Fair daughter, and thou son and grandchild both ; High proof ye now have given to be the race Of Satan—for I glory in the name, Antagonist of heaven's Almighty King— Amply have merited of me, of all The infernal empire, that so near heaven's door Triumphal with triumphal act have met, Mine, with this glorious work, and made one realm. Hell and this world, one realm, one continent Of easy thoroughfare. Therefore—while I Descend through darkness, on your road, with ease, To my associate Powers, them to acquaint With these successes, and with them rejoice— You two this way, among these numerous orbs, All yours, right down to Paradise descend; - There dwell, and reign in bliss: thence on the earth Dominion exercise, and in the air, Chiefly on Man, sole lord of all declared. Him first make sure your thrall, and lastly kill. My substitutes I send ye, and create Plenipotent on earth, of matchless might Issuing from me. On your joint vigour now, My hold of this new kingdom all depends, Through Sin to Death exposed by my exploit. If your joint power prevail, the affairs of hell No detriment need fear; go, and be strong. So saying, he dismissed them. They with speed Their course through thickest constellations held, Spreading their bane; the blasted stars looked wan; - And planets, planet-struck, real eclipse Then suffered. The other way Satan went down The causey to hell-gate. On either side Disparted Chaos overbuilt exclaimed,’ * Exclaimed.—“Deep calling unto deep.” (Ps. Klii :.j 26o PARADISE LOST. e [BOOK X.-417–448. And with rebounding surge the bars assailed, - That scorned his indignation. Through the gate, Wide open and unguarded, Satan passed, And all about found desolate; for those, Appointed to sit there, had left their charge, . Flown to the upper world; the rest were all Far to the inland retired, about the walls . Of Pandemonium, city and proud seat Of Lucifer, so by allusion called Of that bright star to Satan paragoned:" There kept their watch the legions, while the grand In council sat, solicitous what chance Might intercept their emperor sent; so he, Departing, gave command, and they observed. As when the Tartar, from his Russian foe, By Astracan, over the snowy plains Retires; or Bactrian Sophi, from the horns Of Turkish crescent, leaves all waste beyond The realm of Aladule, in his retreat To Tauris or Casbeen : so these, the late Heaven-banished host, left desert utmost hell Many a dark league, reduced in careful watch” Round their metropolis, and now expecting Each hour their great adventurer, from the search Of foreign worlds. . He through the midst, unmarked, In show plebeian angel militant Of lowest order, passed; and from the door Of that Plutonian hall, invisible Ascended his high throne, which, under state Of richest texture spread, at the upper end Was placed in regal lustre. Down a while He sat, and round about him saw, unseen. * Paragoned—Compared, equalled. * Reduced in careful watch.-Contracted, drawn in. And now expecting Each hour their great adventurer, from the search Of foreign worlds. Aook X., lines 439-441. Book x–49-48.1 PARADISE Lost. ... • 26 I At last, as from a cloud, his fulgent head And shape star-bright appeared, or brighter, clad With what permissive glory, since his fall Was left him, or false glitter. All amazed At that so sudden blaze, the Stygian throng Bent their aspect, and whom they wished beheld, Their mighty chief returned. Loud was the acclaim; Forth rushed in haste the great consulting peers, Raised from their dark divan, and with like joy Congratulant approached him, who with hand Silence, and with these words, attention won : Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues, Powers' For in possession such, not only of right, - - I call ye, and declare ye now, returned Successful beyond hope, to lead ye forth Triumphant out of this infernal pit, Abominable, accursed, the house of woe, And dungeon of our tyrant—now possess, As lords, a spacious world, to our native heaven Little inferior, by my adventure hard, With peril great, achieved. Long were to tell What I have done, what suffered; with what pain Voyaged the unreal, vast, unbounded Deep Of horrible confusion; over which, * By Sin and Death, a broad way now is paved, To expedite your glorious march; but I { Toiled out my uncouth passage, forced to ride The untractable Abyss, plunged in the womb Of unoriginal Night and Chaos wild, That, jealous of their secrets, fiercely opposed My journey strange, with clamorous uproar Protesting fate supreme; thence, how I found The new-created world, which ſame in heaven Long had foretold; a fabric wonderful, 262 PARADISE LOST. [Book x–483-sis Of absolute perfection; therein man, Placed in a Paradise, by our exile - Made happy. Him by fraud I have seduced From his Creator; and, the more to increase Your wonder, with an apple. He, thereat Offended—worth your laughter—hath given up Both his beloved Man and all this world, To Sin and Death a prey, and so to us, Without our hazard, labour, or alarm, To range in, and to dwell, and over man To rule as over all He should have ruled. True is, me also he hath judged, or rather Me not, but the brute serpent, in whose shape Man I deceived. That which to me belongs Is enmity, which he will put between Me and mankind. I am to bruise his heel; His seed, when is not set, shall bruise my head. A world who would not purchase with a bruise, Or much more grievous pain Ye have the account Of my performance. What remains, ye gods, But up, and enter now into full bliss 2 - So having said, awhile he stood, expecting Their universal shout, and high applause, - To fill his ear; when, contrary, he hears, On all sides, from innumerable tongues, A dismal universal hiss, the sound Of public scorn. He wondered, but not long Had leisure, wondering at himself now more. His visage drawn he felt to sharp and spare, His arms clung to his ribs, his legs entwining Each other, till, supplanted, down he fell A monstrous serpent, on his belly prone, Reluctant, but in vain;' a greater Power * Reluctant, but in vain.—Unwilling to move on the belly prone, but forced to do • | - T º º º/ - º II. | | º % | | | | Dreadful was the din Of hissing through the hall, thick swarming now With complicated monsters, head and tail. Book X., lines 521-523. | | ". - º | º | º | | | º | º | º | 1ſº | º | "| ". | º º | º ... Tſ º | | | | | |ſ|| I initit lin | Sºlº * Cº Book X.-516–546.] - PARADISE LOST. 263 Now ruled him, punished in the shape he sinned, According to his doom. He would have spoke, But hiss for hiss returned with forked tongue To forked tongue. For now were all transformed Alike, to serpents all, as accessories f To his bold riot. Dreadful was the din - Of hissing through the hall, thick-swarming now With complicated monsters,' head and tail, Scorpion, and Asp, and Amphisbaena dire, Cerastes horned, Hydrus, and Ellops drear, And Dipsas—not so thick swarmed once the soil Bedropt with blood of Gorgon, or the isle Ophiusa—but still greatest he the midst, Now Dragon grown, larger than whom the sun Ingendered in the Pythian vale on slime, Huge Python,” and his power no less he seemed Above the rest still to retain. They all Him followed, issuing forth to the open field, Where all yet left of that revolted rout, Heaven-fallen, in station stood, or just array, Sublime with expectation when to see In triumph issuing forth their glorious chief. They saw, but other sight instead—a crowd Of ugly serpents Horror on them ſell, And horrid sympathy—for, what they saw, They felt themselves now changing. Down their arms, Down fell both spear and shield; down they as fast, And the dire hiss renewed, and the dire form - Catched, by contagion, like in punishment, As in their crime. Thus the applause they meant, Turned to exploding hiss, triumph to shame, * Complicated monsters.-The “scorpion” mentioned among these “monsters” was not a serpent ; the remainder are all mentioned by Lucan, Pliny, and other ancient writers. * Huge Python.--The great serpent said to have come fom the slime left by the deluge in the time of Deucalion. 264 PARADISE LOST. [Book x–547-578 Cast on themselves from their own mouths. There stood A grove hard by, sprung up with this their change, His will who reigns above, to aggravate Their penance, laden with fair fruit, like that Which grew in Paradise, the bait of Eve Used by the tempter. On that prospect strange Their earnest eyes they fixed, imagining For one forbidden tree a multitude Now risen, to work them further woe or shame. Yet, parched with scalding thirst and hunger fierce, Though to delude them sent, could not abstain; But on they rolled in heaps, and up the trees Climbing, sat thicker than the snaky locks That curled Megaera." Greedily they plucked The fruitage fair to sight, like that which grew Near that bituminous lake where Sodom flamed; This more delusive, not the touch, but taste Deceived. They, fondly thinking to allay Their appetite with gust, instead of fruit Chewed bitter ashes, which the offended taste With spattering noise rejected. Oft they assayed, Hunger and thirst constraining; drugged as oft, With hatefulest disrelish writhed their jaws, With soot and cinders filled; so oft they fell Into the same illusion, not as Man Whom they triumphed once lapsed. Thus were they plagued, And worn with famine, long and ceaseless hiss, - Till their lost shape, permitted, they resumed, Yearly enjoined, some say, to undergo This annual humbling, certain numbered days, To dash their pride, and joy for man seduced. However, some tradition they dispersed * Snaky locks that curled Megara.-A name given to the avenging deities—-the Furies. Book X.-579–609.] PARADISE LOST. 265 Among the heathen, of their purchase got, And ſabled how the serpent, whom they called Ophion, with Eurynome, the wide- Encroaching Eve, perhaps, had first the rule Of high Olympus, thence by Saturn driven And Ops, ere yet Dictaean Jove was born. Meanwhile in Paradise the hellish pair Too soon arrived; Sin, there in power before, Once actual; now in body, and to dwell Habitual habitant; behind her, Death, Close following pace for pace, not mounted yet On his pale horse: to whom Sin thus began: Second of Satan sprung, all-conquering Death ! What thinkest thou of our empire now, though earned With travail difficult 2 Not better far Than still at Hell's dark threshold to have sat watch, Unnamed, undreaded, and thyself half-starved 2 Whom thus the sin-born monster answered soon : To me, who with eternal famine pine, Alike is Hell, or Paradise, or Heaven; º There best, where most with ravine I may meet, . Which here, though plentedus, all too little seems To stuff this maw, this vast un-hide-bound” corpse. To whom the incestuous mother thus replied: Thou, therefore, on these herbs, and fruits, and flowers, Feed first; on each beast next, and fish, and fowl, No homely morsels; and whatever thing The scythe of Time mows down, devour unspared, Till I, in man residing, through the race, His thoughts, his looks, words, actions, all infect, And season him thy last and sweetest prey. * Ophion in Greek signifies a serpent, and Milton supposes the old Serpent may have been worshipped under that name. The reference to Eurynome and Eve is obscure, but it points, beyond doubt, to the element of ambition in Eve’s fall. 2 Un-hide-bound—A body hanging loose, wanting filling up. 266 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK X.—6io–643. . This said, they both betook them several ways, Both to destroy, or unimmortal make All kinds, and for destruction to mature Sooner or later; which the Almighty seeing, From his transcendent seat the saints among, To those bright Orders uttered thus his voice: See with what heat these dogs of hell advance To waste and havoc yonder world, which I So fair and good created, and had still Kept in that state, had not the folly of man Let in these wasteful furies, who impute Folly to me; so doth the Prince of hell And his adherents, that with so much ease I suffer them to enter and possess - A place so heavenly; and, conniving, seem To gratify my scornful enemies, - That laugh, as if, transported with some fit Of passion, I to them had quitted all, At random yielded up to their misrule; And know not that I called, and drew them thither, My hellhounds, to lick up the draff and filth Which man's polluting sin with taint hath shed - On what was pure; till, crammed and gorged, nigh burst With sucked and glutted offal, at one sling Of thy victorious arm, well-pleasing Son, Both Sin and Death, and yawning grave, at last, Through Chaos hurled, obstruct the mouth of hell For ever, and seal up his ravenous jaws. Then Heaven and Earth, renewed, shall be made pure To sanctity, that shall receive no stain : - Till then, the curse pronounced on both precedes. He ended, and the heavenly audience loud Sung hallelujah, as the sound of seas, e Through multitude that sung: Just are thy ways, Ø !, Źź ¿? /|||| This said, they both betook them several ways. £. 266. Aook X, line 610. * * * Book x–64-67; e PARADISE LOST. 267 Righteous are thy decrees on all thy works; Who can extenuate Thee? Next, to the Son, Destined Restorer of mankind, by whom New heaven and earth shall to the ages rise, Or down from heaven descend. Such was their song, While the Creator, calling forth by Ila IIIC His mighty Angels, gave them several charge, As sorted best with present things. The sun Had first his precept so to move, so shine, As might affect the earth with cold and heat Scarce tolerable, and from the north to call Decrepit winter; from the south to bring Solstitial summer's heat. To the blank moon Her office they prescribed ; to the other five Their planetary motions, and aspects, In sextile, square, and trine, and opposite, Of noxious efficacy, and when to join In synod unbenign ;' and taught the fixed Their influence malignant when to shower, Which of them rising with the sun, or falling, Should prove tempestuous; to the winds they set Their corners, when with bluster to confound Sea, air, and shore; the thunder when to roll With terror through the dark aerial hall. Some say, He bid his Angels turn askance The poles of earth, twice ten degrees and more, From the sun's axle; they with labour pushed Oblique the centric globe. Some say, the sun . Was bid turn reins from the equinoctial road Like distant breadth to Taurus' with the seven * Is synod unbenign.—One of Milton's faults, even in the judgment of friendly critics, is a somewhat ostentatious display of learning. In the text the reader is favoured with something from the lore of astrology, in which the poet would seem to have been in some sense a believer. * * To Taurus, &c.—This passage describes the supposed relation of the Earth to the signs of the Zodiac through the changes of seasons. - 268 PARADISE LOST. [Book x-º-o: Atlantic Sisters, and the Spartan Twins, Up to the tropic Crab; thence down amain By Leo, and the Virgin, and the Scales, As deep as Capricorn, to bring in change Of seasons to each clime. Else had the spring Perpetual smiled on earth with vernant flowers, Equal in days and nights, except to those Beyond the polar circles; to them day Had unbenighted shone, while the low sun, To recompense his distance, in their sight Had rounded still the horizon, and not known Or east or west, which had forbid the snow From cold Estotiland,' and south as far Beneath Magellan.” At that tasted fruit, The sun, as from Thyestean * banquet, turned His course intended; else, how had the world Inhabited, though sinless, more than now, Avoided pinching cold and scorching heat 2 These changes in the heavens, though slow, produced Like change on sea and land; sidereal blast, Vapour, and mist, and exhalation hot, We Corrupt and pestilent : now, from the north Of Norumbega, and the Samoed" shore, Bursting their brazen dungeon, armed with ice, And snow, and hail, and stormy gust and flaw, Boreas, and Caecias,” and Argestes loud, And Thrascias, rend the woods, and seas upturn With adverse blasts upturns them from the south Notus, and Afer, black with thunderous clouds From Sierra Liona; thwart of these, as fierce, * Estotiland–Greenland. * Magellan.—The Straits of Magellan. * Thyesteam.—A reference to the story which describes Atreus as giving to his brother Thyestes the flesh of his sons as food. From the sight of a father feeding upon his own children the sun is said to have turned away. * Morumbega-In northern America. Samoed.—In the north-east of Muscovy. * Boreas, and Caecias, & "c.—The names which follow are names of winds, or of places where winds of an unusual sort prevail. Book X-704–737.] * PARADISE LOST. & 269 Forth rushed the Levant and the Ponent winds, Eurus and Zephyr, with their lateral noise, Sirocco and Libecchio. Thus began Outrage from lifeless things; but Discord first, Daughter of Sin, among the irrational Death introduced, through fierce antipathy. Beast now with beast 'gan war, and fowl with fowl, And fish with fish : to graze the herb all leaving, Devoured each other; nor stood much in awe - Of man, but fled him, or, with countenance grim, Glared on him passing. These were, from without, The growing miseries which Adam saw Already in part, though hid in gloomiest shade, To sorrow abandoned, but worse felt within; And in a troubled sea of passion tost, . Thus to disburden sought with sad complaint: Oh miserable of happy Is this the end Of this new glorious world, and me so late The glory of that glory? who now, become . Accursed of blessed, hide me from the face Of God, whom to behold was then my height Of happiness! Yet well, if here would end The misery; I deserved it, and would bear My own deservings. But this will not serve; All that I eat or drink, or shall beget, Is propagated curse. Oh voice, once heard Delightfully—Increase and multiply; Now death to hear! for what can I increase, Or multiply, but curses on my head 2 Who of all ages to succeed, but, feeling The evil on him brought by me, will curse My head 2 Ill fare our ancestor impure ! For this we may thank Adam but his thanks Shall be the execration. So, besides 27O PARADISE LOST - (Book x-ass-ri Mine own that bide upon me, all from me Shall with a fierce reflux on me redound; On me, as on their natural centre, light Heavy, though in their place. Oh fleeting joys Of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay To mould me man 2 Did I solicit thee From darkness to promote me, or here place In this delicious garden As my will Concurred not to my being, it were but right And equal to reduce me to my dust; Desirous to resign, and render back, All I received; unable to perform Thy terms too hard, by which I was to hold The good I sought not. To the loss of that, Sufficient penalty, why hast thou added The sense of endless woes 2 Inexplicable Thy justice seems. Yet, to say truth, too late I thus contest; then should have been refused Those terms, whatever, when they were proposed. Thou didst accept them : wilt thou enjoy the good, Then cavil the conditions 2 and, though God Made thee without thy leave, what if thy son Prove disobedient; and, reproved, retort, Wherefore didst thou beget me 2 I sought it not. Wouldst thou admit for his contempt of thee That proud excuse 2 Yet him, not thy election, But natural necessity, begot. - - God made thee of choice his own, and of his own To serve him; thy reward was of his grace; - Thy punishment, then, justly is at his will. Be it so, for I submit; his doom is fair, That dust I am, and shall to dust return. Oh, welcome hour whenever ! Why delays Book X-772–805.] PARADISE LOST. 27 I His hand to execute what his decree - Fixed on this day ? Why do I overlive 2 & Why am I mocked with death, and lengthened out To deathless pain How gladly would I meet Mortality, my sentence, and be earth Insensible ! How glad would lay me down, As in my mother's lap ! There I should rest, And sleep secure; his dreadful voice no more Would thunder in my ears; no fear of worse To me, and to my offspring, would torment me With cruel expectation. Yet one doubt Pursues me still, lest all I cannot die; Lest that pure breath of life—the spirit of M an Which God inspired, cannot together perish With this corporeal clod ; then, in the grave, Or in some other dismal place, who knows But I shall die a living death 2 Oh thought Horrid, if true ! Yet why It was but breath Of life that sinned. What dies but what had life And sin 2 The body properly hath neither. All of me, then, shall die: let this appease The doubt, since human reach no farther knows: For though the Lord of all be infinite, Is his wrath also 2 Be it, man is not so, But mortal doomed. How can he exercise Wrath without end on man, whom death must end ? Can he make deathless death That were to make Strange contradiction, which to God himself Impossible is held, as argument Of weakness, not of power. Will he draw out, For anger's sake, finite to infinite - In punished man, to satisfy his rigour, Satisfied never ? That were to extend His sentence beyond dust and nature's law, 272 PARADISE LOST. (Book x-so-sº By which all causes else, according still To the reception of their matter, act, Not to the extent of their own sphere. But say That death be not one stroke, as I supposed, Bereaving sense, but endless misery - From this day onward—which I feel begun Both in me, and without me—and so last To perpetuity: ah, me! that fear Comes thundering back with dreadful revolution On my defenceless head. Both death and I Are found eternal, and incorporate both ; Nor I on my part single; in me all Posterity stands cursed—fair patrimony That I must leave ye, sons ! Oh, were I able To waste it all myself, and leave ye none ! So disinherited, how would ye bless Me, now your curse Ah, why should all mankind, For one man's fault, thus guiltless be condemned, If guiltless 2 But from me what can proceed But all corrupt; both mind and will depraved, Not to do only, but to will the same With me 2 How can they, then, acquitted stand In sight of God? Him, after all disputes, Forced I absolve: all my evasions vain, And reasonings, though through mazes, lead me still But to my own conviction: first and last On me—me only, as the source and spring Of all corruption, all the blame lights due ; º So might the wrath ! Fond wish ! couldst thou support That burden, heavier than the earth to bear— - Than all the world much heavier, though divided With that bad woman 2 Thus, what thou desirest, And what thou fearest, alike destroys all hope Of refuge, and concludes thee miserable Book X-840–873.] PARADISE LOST. º 273 Beyond all past example and future; To Satan only like, both crime and doom. O conscience | Into what abyss of fears And horrors hast thou driven me; out of which I find no way, from deep to deeper plunged ! Thus Adam to himself lamented loud, Through the still night; not now, as ere man fell, Wholesome, and cool, and mild, but with black air Accompanied ; with damps and dreadful gloom, Which to his evil conscience represented All things with double terror, on the ground Outstretched he lay, on the cold ground, and oft Cursed his creation ; Death as oft accused Of tardy execution, since denounced The day of his offence. Why comes not Death, Said he, with one thrice-acceptable stroke To end me 2 Shall truth fail to keep her word, Justice divine not hasten to be just 2 But Death comes not at call; justice divine Mends not her slowest pace for prayers or cries. O woods, O fountains, hillocks, dales, and bowers | With other echo late I taught your shades To answer, and resound far other song. Whom thus afflicted, when sad Eve beheld, Desolate where she sat, approaching nigh, Soft words to his fierce passion she assayed; But her, with stern regard, he thus repelled : Out of my sight, thou serpent That name best Befits thee, with him leagued, thyself as false And hateful. Nothing wants, but that thy shape, Like-his, and colour serpentine, may show Thy inward fraud, to warn all creatures from thee Henceforth, lest that too heavenly form, pretended To hellish falsehood, snare them | But for thee 274 PARADISE LOST. IBook X.-874-908. I had persisted happy, had not thy pride And wandering vanity, when least was safe, Rejected my forewarning, and disdained Not to be trusted; longing to be seen, Though by the Devil himself, him overweening To over-reach; but, with the serpent meeting, Fooled and beguiled; by him thou, I by thee, To trust thee from my side, irnagined wise, Constant, mature, proof against all assaults; And understood not all was but a show, Rather than solid virtue; all but a rib Crooked by nature, bent, as now appears, More to the part sinister, from me drawn; Well if thrown out, as supernumerary To my just number found. Oh ! why did God, Creator wise, that peopled highest heaven With spirits masculine, create at last This novelty on Earth, this fair defect Of nature, and not fill the world at once With men, as angels, without feminine; Or find some other way to generate Mankind 2 This mischief had not then befallen, And more that shall befall; innumerable Disturbances on earth through female snares, And straight conjunction with this sex; for either He never shall find out fit mate, but such As some misfortune brings him, or mistake; Or whom he wishes most shall seldom gain, Through her perverseness, but shall see her gained By a far worse; or, if she love, withheld By parents; or his happiest choice too late Shall meet, already linked and wedlock-bound To a fell adversary, his hate or shame; Which infinite calamity shall cause To human life, and household peace confound. BOOK X.—909–942.] PARADISE LOST. 275 He added not, and from her turned. But Eve, Not so repulsed, with tears that ceased not flowing, And tresses all disordered, at his feet - Fell humble; and, embracing them, besought His peace, and thus proceeded in her plaint: Forsake me not thus, Adam witness, Heaven, What love sincere, and reverence in my heart, I bear thee, and unweeting have offended, Unhappily deceived Thy suppliant, I beg, and clasp thy knees; bereave me not, Whereon I live, thy gentle looks, thy aid, Thy counsel, in this uttermost distress My only strength and stay; forlorn of thee, Whither shall I betake me, where subsist 2 While yet we live, scarce one short hour perhaps, Between us two let there be peace; both joining, As joined in injuries, one enmity Against a foe by doom express assigned us, That cruel serpent. On me exercise not Thy hatred for this misery befallen; On me, already lost, me than thyself More miserable. Both have sinned; but thou Against God only, I against God and thee; And to the place of judgment will return, There with my cries importune Heaven, that all The sentence, from thy head removed, may light On me, sole cause to thee of all this woe; Me—me only, just object of His ire - She ended, weeping; and her lowly plight, Immovable till peace obtained from fault Acknowledged and deplored, in Adam wrought Commiseration. Soon his heart relented, Towards her, his life so late, and sole delight, Now at his feet submissive in distress; - 276 PARADISE LOST. - [Book X-943-976. Creature so fair his reconcilement seeking, His counsel, whom she had displeased, his aid. As one disarmed, his anger all he lost, And thus with peaceful words upraised her soon : Unwary, and too desirous, as before, So now, of what thou knowest not, who desirest The punishment all on thyself; alas ! Bear thine own first, ill able to sustain His full wrath, whose thou feelest as yet least part, And my displeasure bearest so ill. If prayers Could alter high decrees, I to that place Would speed before thee, and be louder heard, That on my head all might be visited; Thy frailty and infirmer sex forgiven; To me committed, and by me exposed. But rise; let us no more contend, nor blame Each other, blamed enough elsewhere; but strive, In offices of love, how we may lighten Each other's burden, in our share of woe, Since this day's death denounced, if aught I see, - Will prove no sudden, but a slow-paced evil— A long day's dying to augment our pain, And to our seed (O hapless seed ) derived. To whom thus Eve, recovering heart, replied:— Adam, by sad experiment I know How little weight my words with thee can find, Found so erroneous, thence by just event Found so unfortunate: nevertheless, Restored by thee, vile as I am, to place Of new acceptance, hopeful to regain Thy love, the sole contentment of my heart, Living or dying, from thee I will not hide What thoughts in my unquiet breast are risen, - Tending to some relief of our extremes, Book X.-977–1oro.] PARADISE LOST. 2 7 7 Or end; though sharp and sad, yet tolerable, As in our evils, and of easier choice. If care of our descent perplex us most, Which must be born to certain woe, devoured By death at last—and miserable it is To be to others cause of misery, Our own begotten, and of our loins to bring Into this cursed world a woeful race, That, after wretched life, must be at last Food for so foul a monster—in thy power It lies yet, ere conception, to prevent The race unblest, to being yet unbegot. Childless thou art, childless remain; so Death Shall be deceived his glut, and with us two Be forced to satisfy his ravenous maw. But if thou judge it hard and difficult, Conversing, looking, loving, to abstain From love's due rights, nuptial embraces sweet, And, with desire, to languish without hope, Before the present object languishing With like desire, which would be misery . And torment less than none of what we dread, Then, both ourselves and seed at once to free From what we fear for both, let us make short Let us seek Death; or, he not found, supply With our own hands his office on ourselves. Why stand we longer shivering under fears º That show no end but Death; and have the power, Of many ways to die, the shortest choosing, Destruction with destruction to destroy P She ended here, or vehement despair Broke off the rest; so much of Death her thoughts Had entertained, as dyed her cheeks with pale. But Adam, with such counsel nothing swayed, 278 PARADISE LOST. |Book x-roll-low To better hopes his more attentive mind Labouring had raised; and thus to Eve replied: Eve, thy contempt of life and pleasure seems To argue in thee something more sublime And excellent than what thy mind contemns; But self-destruction therefore sought, refutes That excellence thought in thee; and implies, Not thy contempt, but anguish and regret For loss of life and pleasure overloved. Or if thou covet death, as utmost end Of misery, so thinking to evade The penalty pronounced, doubt not but God Hath wiselier armed his vengeful ire, than so To be forestalled ; much more I fear lest death, So snatched, will not exempt us from the pain We are by doom to pay; rather, such acts Of contumacy will provoke the Highest To make death in us live. Then let us seek Some safer resolution, which methinks I have in view, calling to mind with heed Part of our sentence, that thy seed shall bruise The serpent's head—piteous amends ! unless Be meant, whom I conjecture, our grand foe, Satan, who, in the serpent, hath contrived Against us this deceit—to crush his head Would be revenge indeed! which will be lost, By death brought on ourselves, or childless days Resolved, as thou proposest; so our foe Shall 'scape his punishment ordained, and we, Instead, shall double ours upon our heads. No more be mentioned then, of violence Against ourselves, and wilful barrenness That cuts us off from hope, and savours only Rancour and pride, impatience and despite, Book X.-Ioq5–1076.] PARADISE LOST. - 279 Reluctance against God, and his just yoke Laid on our necks. Remember with what mild And gracious temper he both heard and judged, Without wrath or reviling. We expected Immediate dissolution, which we thought Was meant by death that day; when, lo! to thee Pains only in child-bearing were foretold, And bringing forth, soon recompensed with joy, Fruit of thy womb. On me the curse aslope Glanced on the ground ; with labour I must earn My bread—what harm 2 Idleness had been worse; My labour will sustain me; and, lest cold Or heat should injure us, his timely care Hath, unbesought, provided, and his hands Clothed us, unworthy, pitying while he judged; How much more, if we pray him, will his ear Be open, and his heart to pity incline, And teach us further by what means to shun The inclement seasons, rain, ice, hail, and snow! Which now the sky, with various face, begins To show us in this mountain; while the winds Blow moist and keen, shattering the graceful locks Of these fair-spreading trees; which bids us seek Some better shroud, some better warmth, to cherish Our limbs benumbed, ere this diurnal star Leave cold the night, how we his gathered beams Reflected may with matter sere forment; Or, by collision of two bodies, grind The air attrite to fire: as late the clouds Justling, or pushed with winds, rude in their shock, Tine' the slant lightning, whose thwart flame, driven down, Kindles the gummy bark of fir or pine, * Time.—Kindle. Anglo-Saxon. 28O PARADISE LOST. [Book X-roz7-1 104. And sends a comfortable heat from far, Which might supply the sun; such fire to use. And what may else be remedy or cure To evils which our own misdeeds have wrought, He will instruct us praying, and of grace Beseeching him. So as we need not fear To pass commodiously this life, sustained By him with many comforts, till we end In dust, our final rest and native home. What better can we do, than, to the place Repairing where he judged us, prostrate fall Before him, reverent; and there confess Humbly our faults, and pardon beg, with tears Watering the ground, and with our sighs the air Frequenting,' sent from hearts contrite, in sign Of sorrow unfeigned, and humiliation meek 2 Undoubtedly he will relent, and turn From his displeasure; in whose look serene, When angry most he seemed, and most severe, What else but favour, grace, and mercy, shone : So spake our father, penitent; nor Eve Felt less remorse: they, forthwith to the place Repairing where he judged them, prostrate fell Before him, reverent, and both confessed Humbly their faults, and pardon begged, with tears Watering the ground; and with their sighs the air Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign Of sorrow unfeigned, and humiliation meek. * Frequenting—Filling. BOOK xi. The Son of God presents to His Father the prayers of our first parents now repenting, and intercedes for them : God accepts them, but declares that they must no longer abide in Paradise; sends Michael with a band of cherubim to dispossess them ; but first to reveal to Adam future things : Michael's coming down. Adam shows to Eve certain ominous signs : he discerns Michael's approach ; goes out to meet him : the angel denounces their departure. Eve's lamentation. Adam pleads, but submits: the angel leads him up to a high hill; sets before him in vision what shall happen till the flood. - HUS they, in lowliest plight, repentant stood, Praying ; for from the mercy-seat above Prevenient' grace descending had removed The stony from their hearts, and made new flesh Regenerate grow instead, that sighs now breathed Unutterable, which the Spirit of prayer Inspired, and winged for Heaven with speedier flight Than loudest oratory. Yet their port Not of mean suitors; nor important less Seemed their petition, than when the ancient pair, In fables old, less ancient yet than these, Deucalion and chaste Pyrrha, to restore The race of mankind drowned, before the shrine Of Themis stood devout. To Heaven their prayers Flew up, nor missed the way, by envious winds Blown vagabond or frustrate :” in they passed Dimensionless through Heavenly doors; then clad With incense, where the golden altar fumed, By their great Intercessor, came in sight Before the Father's throne: them the glad Son Presenting, thus to intercede began : See, Father, what first-fruits on Earth are sprung From thy implanted grace in man; these sighs * Prevenient.—Going before, before sought. * Vagabond or frustrate.—Not diverted or made vain e * 42 2 K 282 PARADISE LOST. * , |Book XI. -24 57. And prayers, which, in this golden censer, mixed With incense, I, thy priest, before thee bring : Fruits of more pleasing savour, from thy seed Sown with contrition in his heart, than those Which, his own hand manuring, all the trees Of Paradise could have produced, ere fallen From innocence. Now, therefore, bend thine ear To supplication ; hear his sighs, though mute, Unskilful with what words to pray; let me Interpret for him, me, his Advocate And propitiation; all his works on me, - Good, or not good, ingraft; my merit those Shall perfect, and for these my death shall pay. Accept me; and, in me, from these receive The smell of peace toward mankind; let him live Before thee reconciled, at least his days Numbered, though sad, till death, his doom—which I To mitigate thus plead, not to reverse— To better life shall yield him, where with me All my redeemed may dwell in joy and bliss, Made one with me, as I with thee am one. To whom the Father, without cloud, serene: All thy request for Man, accepted Son, Obtain; all thy request was my decree. But, longer in that Paradise to dwell, The law I gave to nature him forbids; Those pure immortal elements that know No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul, Eject him, tainted now, and purge him off, As a distemper gross, to air as gross, And mortal food, as may dispose him best For dissolution wrought by sin, that first Distempered all things, and of incorrupt Corrupted. I, at first, with two fair gifts Book xi−58-89.) - PARADISE LOST. 283 Created him endowed, with happiness, And immortality; that fondly lost, This other served but to eternise woe, Till I provided death: so death becomes His final remedy, and, after life, Tried in sharp tribulation, and refined By faith and faithful works, to second life, Waked in the renovation of the just, Resigns him up with heaven and earth renewed. But let us call to synod all the blest - Through heaven's wide bounds; from them I will not hide My judgments, how with mankind I proceed, As how with peccant Angels late they saw, And in their state, though firm, stood more confirmed. He ended, and the Son gave signal high To the bright minister that watched. He blew His trumpet, heard in Oreb since, perhaps, When God descended, and, perhaps, once more To sound a general doom. The angelic blast Filled all the regions. From their blissful bowers Of amaranthine shade, fountain, or spring, By the waters of life, where'er they sat In fellowships of joy, the Sons of Light Hasted, resorting to the summons high, And took their seats, till, from his throne supreme, The Almighty thus pronounced his sovereign will : O Sons, like one of us Man is become, To know both good and evil, since his taste Of that defended' fruit; but let him boast His knowledge of good lost, and evil got; Happier, had it sufficed him to have known Good by itself, and evil not at all. * Defended—Forbidden. 284. PARADISE LOST. - [Book XI.-90–123. He sorrows now, repents, and prays contrite, My motions in him; longer than they move, His heart I know how variable and vain, Self-left. Lest, therefore, his now bolder hand Reach also of the tree of life, and eat, And live for ever, dream at least to live For ever—to remove him I decree, And send him from the garden forth to till The ground whence he was taken, fitter soil. Michael, this my behest have thou in charge; Take to thee from among the cherubim t Thy choice of flaming warriors, lest the Fiend, Or in behalf of man, or to invade Vacant possession, some new trouble raise. Haste thee, and from the Paradise of God, Without remorse, drive out the sinful pair; From hallowed ground the unholy; and denounce To them, and to their progeny, from thence Perpetual banishment. Yet, lest they faint At the sad sentence rigorously urged— For I behold them softened, and with tears Bewailing their excess—all terror hide. If patiently thy bidding they obey, Dismiss them not disconsolate; reveal To Adam what shall come in future days, As I shall thee enlighten; intermix My covenant in the woman's seed renewed. So send them forth, though sorrowing, yet in peace. And, on the east side of the garden, place, Where entrance up from Eden easiest climbs, Cherubic watch; and of a sword the flame Wide-waving, all approach far off to fright, And guard all passage to the tree of life, Lest Paradise a receptacle prove * Book XI.-124-154-] PARADISE LOST. 285 To spirits foul, and all my trees their prey, With whose stolen fruit Man once more to delude He ceased; and the archangelic Power prepared For swift descent; with him the cohort bright Of watchful Cherubim. Four faces each Had, like a double Janus;' all their shape Spangled with eyes more numerous than those Of Argus’ and more wakeful than to drowse, Charmed with Arcadian pipe, the pastoral reed Of Hermes, or his opiate rod. Meanwhile, To re-salute the world with sacred light, Leucothea waked, and with fresh dews embalmed The earth; when Adam and first matron Eve Had ended now their orisons, and found Strength added from above, new hope to spring Out of despair, joy, but with fear yet linked ; Which thus to Eve his welcome words renewed: Eve, easily may faith admit that all The good which we enjoy from heaven descends; But that from us aught should ascend to Heaven So prevalent, as to concern the mind Of God, high-blest, or to incline His will, Hard to belief may seem : yet this will prayer, Or one short sigh of human breath, upborne Even to the seat of God. For since I sought By prayer the offended Deity to appease, Kneeled, and before him humbled all my heart, Methought I saw him placable and mild, Bending his ear; persuasion in me grew That I was heard with favour; peace returned Home to my breast, and to my memory * Double janus—A favourite Roman deity, described as having two faces. * Argus.--Son of Jupiter, who had a hundred eyes; but being hushed to sleep by the pipe of Hermes (Mercury), that deity cut off his head. w . * Leucothea.—A Grecian divinity—a goddess of the morning and of the sea. 286 PARADISE LOST. [Book XI.-155-188, His promise, that thy seed shall bruise our Foe: Which, then not minded in dismay, yet now Assures me that the bitterness of death Is past, and we shall live. Whence, hail to thee, Eve, rightly called Mother of all Mankind, Mother of all things living, since by thee Man is to live, and all things live for Man. To whom thus Eve, with sad demeanour, meek: Ill-worthy I such title should belong To me, transgressor, who, for thee ordained A help, became thy snare: to me reproach Rather belongs, distrust, and all dispraise. But infinite in pardon was my Judge, That I, who first brought death on all, am graced The source of life; next favourable thou, Who highly thus to entitle me vouchsafest, Far other name deserving. But the field To labour calls us, now with sweat imposed, Though after sleepless night; for see the Morn, All unconcerned with our unrest, begins Her rosy progress, smiling. Let us forth, I never from thy side henceforth to stray, Where'er our day's work lies, though now enjoined Laborious till day droop. While here we dwell, What can be toilsome in these pleasant walks 2 Here let us live, though in fallen state, content. So spake, so wished, much-humbled Eve; but fate Subscribed not. Nature first gave signs, impressed On bird, beast, air—air suddenly eclipsed, After short blush of morn. Nigh, in her sight, The bird of Jove, stooped from his aery tour, Two birds of gayest plume before him drove; Down from a hill, the beast that reigns in woods, First hunter then, pursued a gentle brace, A. 286. The heavenly bands Down from a sky of jasper lighted now In Paradise. Aook XV., lines 208–21o. book XI.-189–220.] PARADISE LOST. 287 Goodliest of all the forest, hart and hind; N Direct to the eastern gate was bent their flight. Adam observed, and, with his eye the chase Pursuing, not unmoved, to Eve thus spake: O Eve, some further change awaits us nigh, Which Heaven, by these mute signs in Nature, shows, Forerunners of His purpose; or to warn Us, haply too secure of our discharge From penalty, because from death released Some days; how long, and what till then our life, Who knows? or more than this, that we are dust, And thither must return, and be no more? Why else this double object in our sight, Of flight pursued in the air, and o'er the ground, One way the self-same hour? Why, in the east, Darkness ere day's mid-course, and morning-light More orient in yon western cloud, that draws O'er the blue firmament a radiant white, And slow descends with something heavenly fraught 2 He erred not; for, by this, the heavenly bands Down from a sky of jasper lighted now In Paradise, and on a hill made halt; A glorious apparition, had not doubt And carnal fear that day dimmed Adam's eye. Not that more glorious, when the Angels met Jacob in Mahanaim,' where he saw The field pavilioned with his guardians bright; - Nor that which on the flaming mount appeared In Dothan, covered with a camp of fire, Against the Syrian king, who, to surprise One man, assassin-like, had levied war, War unproclaimed. The princely hierarch • ?acob in Mahanaim.—Gen. xxxii. * Dotham.–2 Kings vi. 13–17. 288 PARADISE LOST. - [Book XI.-221-254 In their bright stand there left his Powers, to seize Possession of the garden. He alone, To find where Adam sheltered, took his way, Not unperceived of Adam ; who to Eve, While the great visitant approached, thus spake: Eve, now expect great tidings, which, perhaps, Of us will soon determine, or impose New laws to be observed; for I descry, From yonder blazing cloud that veils the hill, One of the heavenly host, and, by his gait, . None of the meanest; some great Potentate, Or of the Thrones above, such majesty Invests his coming; yet not terrible, That I should fear, nor sociably mild, As Raphael, that I should much confide, But solemn and sublime; whom, not to offend, With reverence I must meet, and thou retire. - He ended ; and the Archangel soon drew nigh, Not in his shape celestial, but as man Clad to meet man. Over his lucid arms A military vest of purple flowed, Livelier than Meliboean, or the grain Of Sarra, worn by kings and heroes old In time of truce: Iris had dipt the woof. His starry helm unbuckled showed him prime In manhood where youth ended; by his side, As in a glistering zodiac, hung the sword, Satan's dire dread, and in his hand the spear. Adam bowed low. He, kingly, from his state Inclined not, but his coming thus declared: Adam, Heaven's high behest no preface needs: Sufficient that thy prayers are heard; and Death, Then due by sentence when thou didst transgress, Defeated of his seizure many days, Book XI.-255–286.] . e PARADISE LOST. º - 289 Given thee of grace, wherein thou mayst repent, And one bad act with many deeds well done Mayst cover: well may, then, thy Lord, appeased, Redeem thee quite from Death's rapacious claim. But longer in this Paradise to dwell Permits not. To remove thee I am come, And send thee from the garden forth, to till The ground whence thou wast taken, fitter soil. He added not; for Adam, at the news Heart-struck, with chilling gripe of sorrow stood, That all his senses bound: Eve, who unseen, Yet all had heard, with audible lament Discovered soon the place of her retire: O unexpected stroke, worse than of Death! Must I thus leave thee, Paradise 2 thus leave Thee, native soil these happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of gods? where I had hope to spend, Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day That must be mortal to us both 2 O flowers, That never will in other climate grow, My early visitation, and my last At even, which I bred up with tender hand From the first opening bud, and gave ye names' Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount 2 Thee, lastly, nuptial bower, by me adorned With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee How shall I part, and whither wander down Into a lower world, to this obscure And wild? How shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits 2 Whom thus the Angel interrupted mild: * Her retire.—Her retirement, retreat. 29O PARADISE LOST. - ſBook XI.-287-320. Lament not, Eve, but patiently resign What justly thou hast lost, nor set thy heart. Thus over fond, on that which is not thine. Thy going is not lonely; with thee goes . Thy husband; him to follow thou art bound; Where he abides, think there thy native soil. Adam, by this from the cold sudden damp Recovering, and his scattered spirits returned, To Michael thus his humble words addressed: Celestial, whether among the Thrones, or named Of them the Highest, for such of shape may seem Prince above princes ! gently hast thou told Thy message, which might else in telling wound, And, in performing, end us. What besides Of sorrow, and dejection, and despair, Our frailty can sustain, thy tidings bring, Departure from this happy place—our sweet Recess, and only consolation left Familiar to our eyes—all places else Inhospitable appear, and desolate, - Nor knowing us, nor known ; and if, by prayer Incessant, I could hope to change the will Of Him who all things can, I would not cease To weary him with my assiduous cries. - But prayer against his absolute decree No more avails than breath against the wind, Blown stifling back on him that breathes it forth. Therefore to His great bidding I submit. This most afflicts me; that, departing hence, As from His face I shall be hid, deprived His blessed countenance. Here I could frequent, With worship, place by place where he vouchsafed Presence Divine, and to my sons relate, On this mount He appeared; under this tree Book Xl.–321-354.] PARADISE LOST. 291 Stood visible; among these pines his voice I heard; here with Him at this fountain talked. So many grateful altars I would rear Of grassy turf, and pile up every stone Of lustre from the brook, in memory Or monument to ages, and thereon Offer sweet-smelling gums, and fruits, and flowers. In yonder nether world where shall I seek His bright appearances, or footstep trace 2 For though I fled him angry, yet, recalled To life prolonged and promised race, I now Gladly behold though but his utmost skirts Of glory, and far off his steps adore. To whom thus Michael, with regard benign: Adam, thou knowest heaven His, and all the earth; Not this rock only. His omnipresence fills Land, sea, and air, and every kind that lives, Fomented by his virtual power, and warmed. All the earth he gave thee to possess and rule, No despicable gift. Surmise not, then, His presence to these narrow bounds confined Of Paradise, or Eden; this had been - - Perhaps, thy capital seat, from whence had spread, All generations, and had hither come, From all the ends of the Earth, to celebrate And reverence thee, their great progenitor, But this pre-eminence thou hast lost, brought down To dwell on even ground now with thy sons. Yet doubt not but in valley and in plain, God is, as here, and will be found alike Present; and of his presence many a sign Still following thee, still compassing thee round With goodness and Paternal love, his face Express, and of his steps the track divine. 292 PARADISE LOST. [Book XI.- 355 386. Which that thou mayst believe, and be confirmed Ere thou from hence depart, know, I am sent To shew thee what shall come in future days To thee, and to thy offspring; good with bad Expect to hear, supernal grace contending With sinfulness of men; thereby to learn True patience, and to temper joy with fear And pious sorrow, equally inured By moderation either state to bear, Prosperous or adverse. So shalt thou lead Safest thy life, and best prepared endure Thy mortal passage when it comes. Ascend This hill; let Eve—for I have drenched her eyes— Here sleep below, while thou to foresight wakest; As once thou sleptest, while she to life was formed. To whom thus Adam gratefully replied: Ascend, I follow thee, safe guide, the path Thou leadest me; and to the hand of Heaven submit, However chastening; to the evil turn My obvious breast, arming to overcome By suffering, and earn rest from labour won, If so I may attain. So both ascend In the visions of God. It was a hill, Of Paradise the highest, from whose top, The hemisphere of earth, in clearest ken, Stretched out to the amplest reach of prospect, lay. Not higher that hill, nor wider looking round, Whereon, for different cause, the Tempter set Our second Adam, in the wilderness, To show him all Earth's kingdoms,' and their glory. His eye might there command wherever stood City of old or modern fame, the seat * All Earth's kingdoms.-This description is in part literal, or seems to be so; but Milton must have known that from many causes. his readers could only regard it as a vision. - Book XI.- :387-416.] . - PARADISE LOST. 293 Of mightiest empire, from the destined walls Of Cambalu, seat of Cathaian' Cham, And Samarcand by Oxus, Temir's" throne, To Paquin, of Sinaean kings; and thence To Agra, and Lahor, of Great Mogul, Down to the golden Chersonese;” or where The Persian in Ecbatan sat, or since In Hispahan; or where the Russian Czar In Moscow ; or the Sultan in Bizance," Turchestan-born ; nor could his eye not ken The empire of Negus to his utmost port Ercoco, and the less maritime kings, Mombaza, and Quiloa, and Melind, And Sofala—thought Ophir—to the realm Of Congo, and Angola farthest south : Or thence from Niger flood to Atlas mount, The kingdoms of Almanzor, Fez and Sus, Morocco, and Algiers, and Tremisen; On Europe thence, and where Rome was to sway The world. In spirit, perhaps, he also saw Rich Mexico, the seat of Montezume, And Cusco in Peru, the richer seat Of Atabalipa, and yet unspoiled Guiana, whose great city Geryon's sons Call El Dorado.” But to nobler sights Michael from Adam's eyes the film removed, Which that false fruit, that promised clearer sight, Had bred; then purged with euphrasy and rue' The visual nerve, for he had much to see, And from the well of life three drops instilled. * Cathaian.—Cathai was accounted the residence of the great Zinghis Khan. * Temir.—Timür Lung—Tamerlane. * Golden Chersonese.—Peninsula of Molucca. • Bisance.—Byzantium, Constantinople. * s Turchestan-born.—Descended from a race which had migrated from Turchestān. • El Dorado.—The country in which the unfortunate Raleigh had hoped to realise large wealth. 7 Euphrasy and rue.--Fomentations from the plants so named were supposed to be good for the sight. 294 PARADISE LOST. [Book XI.-417-446. So deep the power of these ingredients pierced, Even to the inmost seat of mental sight, That Adam, now enforced to close his eyes, Sunk down, and all his spirits became entranced; But him the gentle angel by the hand Soon raised, and his attention thus recalled: Adam, now ope thine eyes, and first behold The effects which thy original crime hath wrought In some to spring from thee, who never touched The excepted tree, nor with the snake conspired, Nor sinned thy sin; yet from that sin derive Corruption, to bring forth more violent deeds. His eyes he opened, and beheld a field, Part arable and tilth, whereon were sheaves New reaped; the other part, sheep-walks and folds; In the midst an altar, as the landmark stood, Rustic, of grassy sward. Thither, anon, A sweaty reaper from his tillage brought First-fruits, the green ear, and the yellow sheaf, Unculled, as came to hand; a shepherd next, More meek, came with the firstlings of his flock, Choicest and best; then, sacrificing, laid - The inwards and their fat, with incense strewed, On the cleft wood, and all due rites performed. His offering soon propitious fire from heaven Consumed with nimble glance, and grateful steam; The other's not, for his was not sincere. Whereat he inly raged, and, as they talked, Smote him into the midriff with a stone That beat out life.' He fell, and, deadly pale, * “And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground. And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock, and of the fat thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering : but unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect. And Cain was very wroth, and his countenance fell. . . . And Cain talked with Abel his brother : and it came to pass, when they were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother, and slew him.” *Gen. iv. 2—8.) Rook XI.-447–479.] PARADISE LOST. • 295 Groaned out his soul, with gushing blood effused. Much at that sight was Adam in his heart Dismayed, and thus in haste to the Angel cried: O Teacher, some great mischief hath befallen To that meek man, who well had sacrificed; Is piety thus, and pure devotion, paid To whom Michael thus, he also moved, replied: - These two are brethren, Adam, and to come Out of thy loins. The unjust the just hath slain, For envy that his brother's offering found From Heaven acceptance; but the bloody fact Will be avenged, and the other's faith, approved, Lose no reward, though here thou see him die, Rolling in dust and gore. To which our sire: Alas! both for the deed, and for the cause! But have I now seen death 2 Is this the way I must return to native dust? O sight Of terror, foul and ugly to behold ! Horrid to think, how horrible to feel ! To whom thus Michael: Death thou hast seen In his first shape on Man; but many shapes Of Death, and many are the ways that lead To his grim cave; all dismal, yet to sense More terrible at the entrance than within. Some, as thou sawest, by violent stroke shall die; By fire, flood, famine; by intemperance more In meats and drinks, which on earth shall bring Diseases dire, of which a monstrous crew - Before thee shall appear, that thou mayst know What misery the inabstinence of Eve Shall bring on men. Immediately a place Before his eyes appeared, sad, noisome, dark, A lazar-house' it seemed, wherein were laid * A lasar-house.—A hospital. 296 PARADISE LOST. (Book XI-480-s a Numbers of all diseased; all maladies Of ghastly spasm, or racking torture, qualms Of heart-sick agony, all feverous kinds, Convulsions, epilepsies, fierce catarrhs, Intestine stone and ulcer, cholic pangs, Demoniac frenzy, moping melancholy, And moon-struck madness, pining atrophy,' Marasmus,” and wide-wasting pestilence, Dropsies, and asthmas, and joint-racking rheums, Dire was the tossing, deep the groans. Despair Tended the sick, busiest from couch to couch ; And over them triumphant Death his dart Shook, but delayed to strike, though oft invoked With vows, as their chief good, and final hope. Sight so deform what heart of rock could long Dry-eyed behold 2 Adam could not, but wept, Though not of woman born; compassion quelled His best of man, and gave him up to tears A space, till firmer thoughts restrained excess; And, scarce recovering words, his plaint renewed: O miserable mankind, to what fall Degraded, to what wretched state reserved 1. Better end here unborn. Why is life given To be thus wrested from us 2 Rather, why Obtruded on us thus 2 who, if we knew What we receive, would either not accept Life offered, or soon beg to lay it down, Glad to be so dismissed in peace. Can thus The image of God in man, created once So goodly and erect, though faulty since, To such unsightly sufferings be debased Under inhuman pains 2 Why should not man, Retaining still Divine similitude * Atrophy (ćrpoºia).—When a body wastes away from disease in the digestive organs. * Marasmus (Maoaguóc).—Consumption. * - Boos xi-sis-sº" PARADISE LOST. 297 In part, from such deformities be free, And, for his Maker's image sake, exempt. Their Maker's image, answered Michael, then Forsook them, when themselves they vilified To serve ungoverned appetite, and took His image whom they served, a brutish vice, Inductive mainly to the sin of Eve. Therefore so abject is their punishment, Disfiguring not God's likeness, but their own; Or, if His likeness, by themselves defaced ; While they pervert pure nature's healthful rules To loathsome sickness; worthily, since they God's image did not reverence in themselves. I yield it just, said Adam, and submit: But is there yet no other way, besides These painful passages, how we may come To death, and mix with our connatural dust? There is, said Michael, if thou well observe The rule of: Not too much—by temperance taught, In what thou eat'st and drink'st; seeking from thence Due nourishment, not gluttonous delight. 4- Till many years over thy head return, So mayst thou live, till, like ripe fruit, thou drop Into thy mother's lap, or be with ease Gathered, not harshly plucked, for death mature. This is old age; but, then, thou must outlive Thy youth, thy strength, thy beauty; which will change To withered, weak, and gray; thy senses then, Obtuse, all taste of pleasure must forego, To what thou hast; and for the air of youth, Hopeful and cheerful, in thy blood will reign A melancholy damp of cold and dry, To weigh thy spirits down, and last consume The balm of life. To whom our ancestor: 298 - PARADISE LOST. [Book Xl.—547–577 Henceforth I fly not Death, nor would prolong Life much; bent, rather, how I may be quit, Fairest and easiest, of this cumbrous charge, Which I must keep till my appointed day Of rendering up, and patiently attend My dissolution. Michael replied: Nor love thy life, nor hate, but what thou livest Live well; how long, or short, permit to Heaven. And now prepare thee for another sight. He looked, and saw a spacious plain, whereon Were tents of various hues." By some were herds Of cattle grazing; others, whence the sound Of instruments, that made melodious chime, Was heard, of harp and organ, and who moved Their stops and chords was seen, his volant touch, Instinct through all proportions, low and high, Fled and pursued transverse the resonant fugue. In other part stood one who, at the forge . Labouring, two massy clods of iron and brass Had melted—whether found where casual fire Had wasted woods on mountain or in vale, Down to the veins of earth, thence gliding hot To some cave's mouth, or whether washed by stream From under ground. The liquid ore he drained Into fit moulds prepared, from which he formed First, his own tools, then, what might else be wrought Fusil or graven” in metal. After these, But on the hither side, a different sort, From the high neighbouring hills, which was their seat, Down to the plain descended; by their guise - * Just men they seemed, and all their study bent * Were tents of various hues.—“And Adah bare Jabal : he was the father of such as dwell in tents, and of such as have cattle. And his brother's name was Jubal : he was the father of all such as handle the harp and organ. And Zillah, she also bare Tubal-Cain, an instructor of every artificer in brass and iron.” (Gen. iv. 20–22.) * Fusil or graven.—Fused or graven e Book XI.-578–608.] PARADISE LOST. 299 To worship God aright, and know his works Not hid, nor those things last, which might preserve Freedom and peace to men. They on the plain Long had not walked, when from the tents, behold A bevy of fair women, richly gay - In gems and wanton dress; to the harp they sung Soft amorous ditties, and in dance came on. - The men, though grave, eyed them, and let their eyes Rove without rein ; till, in the amorous net Fast caught, they liked, and each his liking chose. And now of love they treat, till the evening star, Love's harbinger, appeared; then, all in heat, They light the nuptial torch, and bid invoke Hymen, then first to marriage rites invoked; With feast and music all the tents resound. Such happy interview, and fair event Of love and youth not lost, songs, garlands, flowers, And charming symphonies, attached the heart' Of Adam, soon inclined to admit delight, The bent of nature; which he thus expressed : True opener of mine eyes, prime Angel blest, Much better seems this vision, and more hope Of peaceful days portends, than those two past; Those were of hate and death, or pain much worse: Here nature seems fulfilled in all her ends. To whom thus Michael: Judge not what is best By pleasure, though to nature seeming meet; * Created, as thou art, to nobler end Holy and pure, conformity divine Those tents thou sawest so pleasant were the tents Of wickedness, wherein shall dwell his race 1 Attached the heart.—“And it came to pass when men began to multiply on the ſace of the earth, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose.” (Gen. vi. 1, 2.) º 3OO PARADISE LOST. [book xi. -609 6so Who slew his brother; studious they appear Of arts that polish life, inventors rare, Unmindful of their Maker, though his Spirit Taught them,' but they his gifts acknowledged none. Yet they a beauteous offspring shall beget; For that fair female troop thou sawest, that seemed Of goddesses, so blithe, so smooth, so gay, Yet empty of all good, wherein consists Woman's domestic honour and chief praise; Bred only and completed to the taste Of lustful appetance, to sing, to dance, To dress, and troll the tongue, and roll the eye: To these that sober race of men, whose lives Religious titled them the sons of God, Shall yield up all their virtue, all their fame, Ignobly, to the trains and to the smiles Of these fair atheists; and now swim in joy, Ere long to swim at large; and laugh, for which The world ere long a world of tears must weep. To whom thus Adam, of short joy bereft: O pity and shame, that they, who to live well Entered so fair, should turn aside to tread Paths indirect, or in the midway faintſ But still I see the tenor of man's woe Holds on the same, from woman to begin. From man's effeminate slackness it begins, Said the angel, who should better hold his place By wisdom, and superior gifts received. But now prepare thee for another scene. He looked, and saw wide territory spread Before him, towns, and rural works between, Cities of men with lofty gates and towers, * Though his Spirit taught them.—“And he hath filled him with the spirit of God, in wisdom, in understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of workmanship.” (Exod. xxxv. 31.) Book XI.--641-671.] PARADISE LOST. º - 301 Concourse in arms, fierce faces threatening war, Giants of mighty bone and bold emprise." Part wield their arms, part curb the foaming steed, Single, or in array of battle ranged, Both horse and foot, nor idly mustering stood. One way a band select from forage drives A herd of beeves, fair oxen and fair kine, From a fat meadow-ground; or fleecy flock, Ewes and their bleating lambs over the plain, Their booty; scarce with life the shepherds fly, But call in aid, which makes a bloody fray. - With cruel tournament the squadrons join ; Where cattle pastured late, now scattered lies With carcases and arms, the ensanguined field Deserted. Others to a city strong Lay siege, encamped; by battery, scale, and mine, Assaulting; others from the wall defend - With dart and javelin, stones, and sulphurous fire; On each hand slaughter, and gigantic deeds. In other part the sceptred heralds call To council, in the city gates. Anon Gray-headed men and grave, with warriors mixed, Assemble, and harangues are heard; but soon In factious opposition, till, at last, Of middle age one rising, eminent In wise deport, spake much of right and wrong, Of justice, of religion, truth, and peace, And judgment from above; him old and young Exploded,” and had seized with violent hands, Had not a cloud descending snatched him thence, Unseen amid the throng. So violence * Bold emprise.—Courageous deeds. • Exploded.—Denounced, hissed. The poet's account of Enoch is taken in part from the Apocryphal Book of Enoch cited in the Epistle of Jude—“Enoch also, the seventh from Adam, prophesied of these, saying, Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousand of his saints.” (Jude 14.) “And Enoch walked with God: and he was not ; for God took him.” (Gen. v. 24.) 3O2 PARADISE LOST. [BOOK XI.-672–7oa Proceeded, and oppression, and sword law, Through all the plain, and refuge none was found. Adam was all in tears, and to his guide Lamenting, turned full sad: O what are these ? Death's ministers, not men who thus deal death Inhumanly to men, and multiply Ten thousand fold the sin of him who slew His brother; for of whom such massacre Make they, but of their brethren, men of men 2 But who was that just man, whom had not Heaven Rescued, had in his righteousness been lost 2 To whom thus Michael: These are the product Of those ill-mated marriages' thou sawest; Where good with bad were matched, who of themselves Abhor to join, and, by imprudence mixed, Produce prodigious births of body or mind. | Such were those giants, men of high renown; For in those days might only shall be admired, And valour and heroic virtue called. - To overcome in battle, and subdue Nations, and bring home spoils, with infinite Manslaughter, shall be held the highest pitch Of human glory; and for glory done Of triumph, to be styled great conquerors, Patrons of mankind, gods, and sons of gods; Destroyers rightlier called, and plagues of men. Thus fame shall be achieved, renown on earth; And what most merits fame, in silence hid. But he, the seventh from thee, whom thou beheldest The only righteous in a world perverse, - And therefore hated, therefore so beset * Ill-mated marriages.—“There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.” (Gen. vi. 4.) - - - - ES cº- - ==== s.s - ===s - sº. -- º - ses | | Began to build a vessel of huge bulk. º º s vº | ºil. - - º s- Book X., line 729. [Book XI-703-136) PARADISE LOST. 303 With foes, for daring single to be just, And utter odious truth, that God would come To judge them with His saints, him the Most High, Rapt in a balmy cloud with winged steeds, Did, as thou sawest, receive, to walk with God High in salvation and the climes of bliss, Exempt from death; to shew thee what reward Awaits the good; the rest what punishment, Which now direct thine eyes and soon behold. He looked, and saw the face of things quite changed. The brazen throat of war had ceased to roar. - All now was turned to jollity and game, To luxury and riot, feast and dance; Marrying or prostituting, as befell, Rape or adultery, where passing fair Allured them—thence from cups to civil broils. g At length a reverend sire among them came, And of their doings great dislike declared, And testified against their ways. He oft Frequented their assemblies, whereso met, Triumphs or festivals, and to them preached Conversion and repentance, as to souls In prison, under judgment imminent. But all in vain. Which, when he saw, he ceased Contending, and removed his tents far off Then, from the mountain hewing timber tall, Began to build a vessel of huge bulk; Measured by cubit, length, and breadth, and height, Smeared round with pitch, and in the side a door Contrived, and of provisions laid in large For man and beast. When, lo! a wonder strange | Of every beast, and bird, and insect small, Came sevens and pairs, and entered in, as taught Their order. Last, the sire and his three sons, 3O4. PARADISE LOST. LBook AI—737—77o. With their four wives, and God made fast the door. Meanwhile the south wind rose, and, with black wings Wide-hovering, all the clouds together drove From under heaven; the hills to their supply Vapour, and exhalation, dusk and moist, Sent up amain. And now the thickened sky Like a dark ceiling stood; down rushed the rain Impetuous, and continued till the earth No more was seen; the floating vessel swum Uplifted, and secure, with beaked prow, Rode tilting o'er the waves; all dwellings else Flood overwhelmed, and them, with all their pomp, Deep under water rolled; sea covered sea, Sea without shore, and in their palaces, Where luxury late reigned, sea monsters whelped And stabled: of mankind, so numerous late, All left in one small bottom swum embarked. How didst thou grieve then, Adam, to behold The end of all thy offspring, end so sad, Depopulation | Thee, another flood, Of tears and sorrow a flood, thee also drowned, And sunk thee as thy sons; till, gently reared By the Angel, on thy feet thou stood'st at last, Though comfortless—as when a father mourns His children, all in view destroyed at once; And scarce to the angel uttered'st thus thy plaint: O visions ill foreseen better had I Lived ignorant of future: so had borne My part of evil only, each day's lot Enough to bear. Those now, that were dispensed The burden of many ages, on me light At once, by my foreknowing gaining birth Abortive, to torment me, ere their being, With thought that they must be. Let no man seek |ºl º | | | | " | | - | | | | - | l | ||||| | | | º - Hill - - - - |- - - - - \!!! º | º - - == - - || || | ºf \ºsº ºr n | º º -- º ſº ſº p. 304. All dwellings else Flood overwhelmed, and them, with all their pomp, Deep under water rolled. Book XV., lines 747–749. Book XI.-771–804." - PARADISE LOST. 3O5 Henceforth to be foretold what shall befall Him or his children; evil, he may be sure, Which neither his foreknowing can prevent, And he the future evil shall no less In apprehension than in substance feel, Grievous to bear. But that care now is past; Man is not whom to warn; those few escaped, Famine and anguish will at last consume, Wandering that watery desert. I had hope, When violence was ceased, and war on earth, All would have then gone well; peace would have crowned, With length of happy days, the race of man; But I was far deceived; for now I see g Peace to corrupt, no less than war to waste. How comes it thus * Unfold, celestial guide, And whether here the race of man will end. To whom thus Michael: Those, whom last thou sawest In triumph and luxurious wealth, are they First seen in acts of prowess eminent, And great exploits, but of true virtue void, Who, having spilt much blood, and done much waste, Subduing nations, and achieved thereby Fame in the world, high titles, and rich prey, Shall change their course to pleasure, ease, and sloth, Surfeit, and lust; till wantonness and pride Raise out of friendship hostile deeds in peace. The conquered, also, and enslaved by war, Shall, with their freedom lost, all virtue lose, And fear of God, from whom their piety feigned, In sharp contest of battle, found no aid Against invaders; therefore, cooled in zeal, Thenceforth shall practise how to live secure, Worldly or dissolute, on what their lords Shall leave them to enjoy; for the earth shall bear PARADISE LOST. [Book XI-8o3-839 More than enough, that temperance may be tried. So all shall turn degenerate, all depraved, Justice and temperance, truth and faith, forgot; One man except, the only son of light In a dark age, against example good, Against allurement, custom, and a world Offended. Fearless of reproach or scorn, Or violence, he of their wicked ways Shall them admonish ; and before them set The paths of righteousness, how much more safe, And full of peace; denouncing wrath to come On their impenitence, and shall return Of them derided. But of God observed, The one just man alive, by his command Shall build a wondrous ark, as thou beheld'st, To save himself and household from amidst A world devote to universal wrack. No sooner he, with them of man and beast Select for life, shall in the ark be lodged, - And sheltered round, but all the cataracts Of heaven set open on the earth shall pour Rain day and night; all fountains of the deep, Broke up, shall heave the ocean to usurp Beyond all bounds, till inundation rise Above the highest hills; then shall this mount Of Paradise by might of waves be moved Out of his place, pushed by the horned flood, With all his verdure spoiled, and trees adrift, Down the great river to the opening gulf, And there take root, an island salt and bare, The haunt of seals, and orcs, and sea-mews' clang; To teach thee that God attributes to place No sanctity, if none be thither brought By men who there frequent, or therein dwell; And now, what further shall ensue, behold. Book xl.-840-874.1 PARADISE LOST. 3O7 He looked, and saw the ark hull on the flood, Which now abated. For the clouds were fled, Driven by a keen north wind, that, blowing dry, Wrinkled the face of deluge, as decayed; And the clear sun on his wide watery glass Gazed hot, and of the fresh wave largely drew, As after thirst; which made their flowing shrink From standing lake to tripping ebb, that stole, With soft foot, towards the deep, who now had stopt His sluices, as the heaven his windows shut. The ark no more now floats, but seems on ground, Fast on the top of some high mountain fixed. And now the tops of hills, as rocks, appear; With clamour thence the rapid currents drive, Towards the retreating sea, their furious tide. Forthwith from out the ark a raven flies; $ And after him, the surer messenger, A dove, sent forth once and again to spy Green tree or ground, whereon his foot may light. The second time returning, in his bill - An olive leaf he brings, pacific sign. Anon dry ground appears, and from his ark The ancient sire descends, with all his train: Then, with uplifted hands, and eyes devout, Grateful to Heaven, over his head beholds .. A dewy cloud, and in the cloud a bow Conspicuous, with three listed colours gay, Betokening peace from God, and covenant new Whereat the heart of Adam, erst so sad, Greatly rejoiced, and thus his joy broke forth: O Thou, who future things canst represent As present, heavenly instructor, I revive At this last sight; assured that man shall live, ’’ With all the creatures, and their seed preserve. 308 PARADISE LOST. - [Book XI.-874-901. Far less I now lament for one whole world Of wicked sons destroyed, than I rejoice For one man found so perfect, and so just, That God vouchsafes to raise another world From him, and all his anger to forget. But say, what mean those coloured streaks in heaven Distended, as the brow of God appeased ? Or serve they, as a flowery verge, to bind The fluid skirts of that same watery cloud, Lest it again dissolve and shower the earth 2 To whom the Archangel: Dexterously thou aimest; So willingly doth God remit his ire, Though late repenting him of man depraved; Grieved at his heart, when, looking down, he saw The whole earth filled with violence, and all flesh Corrupting each their way. Yet, those removed, Such grace shall one just man find in his sight, That he relents, not to blot out mankind; And makes a covenant, never to destroy The earth again by flood, nor let the sea Surpass his bounds, nor rain to drown the world, With man therein or beast; but when he brings Over the earth a cloud, will therein set . His triple-coloured bow, whereon to look And call to mind His covenant. Day and night, Seed-time and harvest, heat and hoary frost, Shall hold their course, till fire purge all things new, Both heaven and earth, wherein the just shall dwell. BOOK XII. The Angel Michael continues, from the flood, to relate what shall succeed; then, in the mention of Abraham, comes by degrees to explain who that seed of the woman shall be which was promised Adam and Eve in the fall: His in- carnation, death, resurrection, and ascension; the state of the Church till His second coming. Adam, greatly satisfied and re-comforted by these relations and promises, descends the hill with Michael ; wakens Eve, who all this while had slept, but with gentle dreams composed to quietness of mind and submission. Michael, in either hand leads them out of Paradise, the fiery sword waving behind them, and the cherubim taking their stations to guard the place. e . S one who, in his journey, bates at noon, Though bent on speed, so here the Archangel paused Betwixt the world destroyed and world restored, . - If Adam aught, perhaps, might interpose; Then, with transition sweet, new speech resumes: & Thus thou hast seen one world begin, and end, And man, as from a second stock, proceed. Much thou hast yet to see; but I perceive Thy mortal sight to fail; objects divine Must needs impair and weary human sense, Henceforth what is to come I will relate; . Thou, therefore, give due audience, and attend : This second source of men, while yet but few, And while the dread of judgment past remains Fresh in their minds, fearing the Deity, With some regard to what is just and right Shall lead their lives, and multiply apace, Labouring the soil, and reaping plenteous crops, Corn, wine, and oil; and, from the herd or flock, Oft sacrificing bullock, lamb, or kid, With large wine-offerings poured, and sacred feast, Shall spend their days in joy unblamed, and dwell Long time in peace, by families and tribes, 3 IO - PARADISE LOST. - [Book XII.-24-55. Under paternal rule; till one shall rise,' Of proud, ambitious heart, who, not content With fair equality, fraternal state, Will arrogate dominion undeserved Over his brethren, and quite dispossess Concord and law of nature from the earth : Hunting-and men, not beasts, shall be his game- With war, and hostile snare, such as refuse Subjection to his empire tyrannous ! g A mighty hunter thence he shall be styled Before the Lord, as, in despite of Heaven, Or from Heaven, claiming second sovereignty; And from rebellion shall derive his name, Though of rebellion others he accuse. He, with a crew, whom like ambition joins With him, or under him, to tyrannise, Marching from Eden towards the west, shall find The plain wherein a black, bituminous gurge Boils out from under ground, the mouth of Hell. Of brick, and of that stuff, they cast to build A city and tower, whose top may reach to heaven, And get themselves a name, lest, far dispersed In foreign lands, their memory be lost: Regardless whether good or evil ſame But God, who oft descends to visit men Unseen, and through their habitations walks To mark their doings, them beholding soon, Comes down to see their city, ere the tower Obstruct Heaven-towers, and in derision sets Upon their tongues a various spirit, to rase Quite out their native language, and, instead, To sow a jangling noise of words unknown. ' Till one shall rise.—“And Cush begat Nimrod : he began to be a mighty one in the earth. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord : and the beginning of lis kingdom was Babel, in the land of Shinar.” (Gen. x. 8–10.) Book XII.-56–85. PARADISE LOST. * 3 l I Forthwith a hideous gabble rises loud Among the builders; each to other calls, Not understood, till hoarse, and all in rage, As mocked they storm. Great laughter was in Heaven, And looking down to see the hubbub Strange, And hear the din. Thus was the building left Ridiculous, and the work Confusion named.' Whereto thus Adam, fatherly displeased : O execrable son so to aspire Above his brethren; to himself assuming Authority usurped, from God not given. He gave us only over beast, fish, fowl, Dominion absolute; that right we hold By his donation, but man over men He made not lord; such title to Himself Reserving, human left for human free. But this usurper his encroachment proud Stays not on man; to God his tower intends Siege and defiance Wretched man what food Will he convey up thither, to sustain * Himself and his rash army, where thin air Above the clouds, will pine his entrails gross, And famish him of breath, if not of bread 2 - To whom thus Michael : Justly thou abhor'st That son, who on the quiet state of men Such trouble brought, affecting to subdue Rational liberty; yet know withal, Since thy original lapse, true liberty Is lost, which always with right reason dwells, Twinned, and from her hath no dividual being. * The work Confusion named.—“And it came to pass as they journeyed from the east, that they found a plain in the valley of Shinar; and they dwelt there. And they said, Go to, let us make brick, and burn them throughly. And they had brick for stone, and slime had they for mortar. And they said, Go to, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven ; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth. . . . And the Lord came down to see the city and tower,” &c. &c. (Gen. xi. 2 et seq) 31 2 PARADISE LOST. [Book xii.-86-119 Reason in man obscured, or not obeyed, Immediately inordinate desires And upstart passions catch the government From reason, and to servitude reduce Man, till then free. Therefore, since he permits, Within himself, unworthy powers to reign Over free reason, God, in judgment just, Subjects him from without to violent lords, Who oft as undeservedly enthral His outward freedom. Tyranny must be, Though to the tyrant thereby no excuse. Yet sometimes nations will decline so low From virtue, which is reason, that no wrong, But justice, and some fatal curse annexed Deprives them of their outward liberty, Their inward lost. Witness the irreverent son Of him who built the ark, who, for the shame, Done to his father, heard this heavy curse, Servant of servants, on his vicious race. Thus will this latter, as the former, world, Still tend from bad to worse, till God, at last, Wearied with their iniquities, withdraw His presence from among them, and avert His holy eyes, resolving from thenceforth To leave them to their own polluted ways, And one peculiar nation to select - From all the rest, of whom to be invoked, A nation from one faithful man to spring: Him on this side Euphrates yet residing, Bred up in idol worship. O that men— Canst thou believe?—should be so stupid grown, While yet the patriarch lived who 'scaped the flood, As to forsake the living God, and fall * To worship their own work in wood and stone Book XII.-12o-149.J PARADISE LOST. . 31 3 For gods ! Yet him, God the Most High vouchsafes To call, by vision, from his father's house, His kindred, and false gods, into a land Which He will show him; and from him will raise A mighty nation, and upon him shower His benediction so, that in his seed All nations shall be blest.' He straight obeys, Not knowing to what land, yet firm believes. I see him, but thou canst not, with what faith He leaves his gods, his friends, and native soil, Ur of Chaldea, passing now the ford To Haran; after him a cumbrous train Of herds and flocks, and numerous servitude; Not wandering poor, but trusting all his wealth With God, who called him, in a land unknown. Canaan he now attains. I see his tents Pitched about Sechem, and the neighbouring plain Of Moreh. There, by promise, he receives Gift to his progeny of all that land, From Hamath, northward to the desert south— Things by their names I call, though, yet unnamed— From Hermon east, to the great western sea; Mount Hermon, yonder sea; each place behold In prospect, as I point them. On the shore, Mount Carmel; here, the double-founted stream,” Jordan, true limit eastward; but his sons Shall dwell to Senir,’ that long ridge of hills. / This ponder, that all nations of the earth Shall in his seed be blessed. By that seed Is meant thy great Deliverer, who shall bruise * In his seed all nations shall be blest—“Now the Lord had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will shew thee. And I will make of thee a great nation, and in thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed.” (Gen. xii. 1, 2.) * The double-ſounted stream.—The Jordan has its origin, in two fountains or springs the one about twenty ailes north of Caesarea Philippi, the other about eighteen miles south of that spot. * Semir.—The Amorites gave this name to Mount Hermon. 2 O 3 l 4 PARADISE LOST. LBOOK XII.- 150-183 The Serpent's head; whereof to thee anon Plainlier shall be revealed. This patriarch blest, * Whom faithful Abraham due time shall call, A son, and of his son a grandchild, leaves, Like him in faith, in wisdom, and renown. The grandchild, with twelve sons increased, departs From Canaan to a land hereafter called Egypt, divided by the river Nile. - See where it flows, disgorging at seven mouths Into the sea: to sojourn in that land He comes, invited by a younger son In time of dearth—a son, whose worthy deeds Raise him to be the second in that realm Of Pharaoh. There he dies, and leaves his race Growing into a nation. And, now grown Suspected to a sequent king, who seeks To stop their overgrowth, as inmate guests - Too numerous; whence of guests he makes them slaves, Inhospitably; and kills their infant males: Till by two brethren—those two brethren call Moses and Aaron—sent from God to claim His people from enthralment, they return, With glory and spoil, back to their promised land. But first, the lawless tyrant, who denies - To know their God, or message to regard, Must be compelled by signs and judgments dire. To blood unshed the rivers must be turned; Frogs, lice, and flies, must all his palace fill With loathed intrusion, and fill all the land; His cattle must of rot and murrain die; Botches and blains must all his flesh emboss, And all his people ; thunder mixed with hail, Hail mixed with fire, must rend the Egyptian sky, And wheel on the earth, devouring where it rolls; BOOK XII.-184—214.] PARADISE LOST. . 3I 5 \ºat it devours not, herb, or fruit, or grain, A darksome cloud of locusts swarming down Must eat, and on the ground leave nothing green; Darkness must overshadow all his bounds, Palpable darkness, and blot out three days; Last, with one midnight stroke, all the first-born Of Egypt must lie dead. Thus, with ten wounds, The river-dragon, tamed, at length submits To let his sojourners depart, and oft - Humbles his stubborn heart, but still as ice More hardened after thaw till, in his rage Pursuing whom he late dismissed, the sea Swallows him with his host, but them lets pass, As on dry land, between two crystal walls; Awed by the rod of Moses so to stand Divided, till his rescued gain their shore: Such wondrous power God to his saint will lend, Though present in his Angel, who shall go Before them in a cloud, and pillar of fire; By day a cloud, by night a pillar of fire; To guide them in their journey, and remove Behind them, while the obdurate king pursues. All night he will pursue, but his approach Darkness defends between till morning watch; Then through the fiery pillar and the cloud, God, looking forth, will trouble all his host, And craze their chariot-wheels; when, by command, Moses once more his potent rod extends Over the sea : the sea his rod obeys; On their embattled ranks the waves return, And overwhelm their war. The race elect 1 Till morning watch.-“And it came to pass, that in the morning watch the Lord looked unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of the cloud, and troubled the host of the Egyptians, and took off their chariot wheels, so that they drave heavily,” &c. &c. (Exod. xiv. 24–28.) 316 PARADISE LOST. [Book XII-215-248. Safe towards Canaan, from the shore, advance Through the wild desert; not the readiest way, Lest, entering on the Canaanite alarmed, War terrify them, inexpert, and fear Return them back to Egypt, choosing rather Inglorious life with servitude. For life, To noble and ignoble, is more sweet Untrained in arms, where rashness leads not on. This also shall they gain by their delay In the wide wilderness; there they shall found Their government, and their great senate choose Through the twelve tribes, to rule by laws ordained; God, from the mount of Sinai, whose grey top - Shall tremble, He descending, will Himself, In thunder, lightning, and loud trumpets' sound, Ordain them laws; part, such as appertain To civil justice; part, religious rites Of sacrifice; informing them, by types And shadows, of that destined Seed to bruise The Serpent, by what means He shall achieve Mankind's deliverance. . But the voice of God To mortal ear is dreadful: they beseech - That Moses might report to them his will, And terror cease. He grants what they besought, Instructed that to God is no access Without mediator, whose high office now Moses in figure bears, to introduce One greater, of whose day he shall foretell, And all the prophets in their age, the times Of great Messiah shall sing. Thus, laws. and rites Established, such delight hath God in men Obedient to his will, that he vouchsafes Among them to set up his tabernacle— The Holy One with mortal men to dwell: º Tº º º | * % / % / º % Ž. % º º // | º/ | | / / - % ſ º | | º ſ ſº ſ | - % | | | | | | | / | | ^ - & º | º º, | | | º | || - - - º A | - º/ % - A. - º | | n/ Ø // º º º º |||ſ/ % º | ſº ſ // ſ/ // / %. III] - / /* % Ø 2 | T / º % | / º 2. º º º % % // Wilſº ſº z ſ º |/ º | º/ º Ø% |||}| º ſ | | | | | ſ | | | | | º º ſ |||||| | nº | / | A º - mºs. ||||||| // º: ſº º % / º º º / 2 % Ø ſº Z | | % | % ||||||| º %| % | - | | %| % | Z/ Ø º | | | %| W --- | - | | | | - - | // - ſ - º | / |/ W | | º / | - - | / | | - |||||| | ||||||||| ||||||||||| º | | | |||||| | ||| | | | | II.III | | | ſ|| | s , , § 31 7 Book xii-249-282) PARADISE LOST. - Q: By his prescript a sanctuary is framed Of cedar, overlaid with gold; therein An ark, and in the ark his testimony, The records of his covenant; over these A mercy-seat of gold, between the wings Of two bright cherubim; before him burn Seven lamps, as in a zodiac, representing The heavenly fires; over the tent a cloud Shall rest by day, a fiery gleam by night, Save when they journey, and at length they come, Conducted by his Angel,' to the land Promised to Abraham and his seed. The rest Were long to tell; how many battles fought; How many kings destroyed, and kingdoms won; Or how the sun shall in mid heaven stand still A day entire, and night's due course adjourn, Man's voice commanding, Sun, in Gibeon stand, And thou, moon, in the vale of Ajalon, e Till Israel overcome —so call the third From Abraham, son of Isaac ; and from him His whole descent, who thus shall Canaan win. Here Adam interposed: O sent from Heaven Enlightener of my darkness, gracious things Thou hast revealed, those chiefly which concern Just Abraham and his seed. Now first I find Mine eyes true opening, and my heart much eased, Erewhile perplexed with thoughts, what would become Of me and all mankind; but now I see His day, in whom all nations shall be blest; Favour unmerited by me, who sought Forbidden knowledge by forbidden means. This yet I apprehend not; why to those * Conducted by his Angel.—“For my Angel shall go before thee, and bring thee,” &c. 3.18 - PARADISE LOST. [Book XII.-281-311 Among whom God will deign to dwell on earth, So many and so various laws are given So many laws argue so many sins Among them ; how can God with such reside 2 To whom thus Michael: Doubt not but that sin Will reign among them, as of thee begot; And, therefore, was law given them, to evince Their natural pravity, by stirring up Sin against law' to fight; that when they see Law can discover sin, but not remove, Save by those shadowy expiations weak, The blood of bulls and goats, they may conclude Some blood more precious must be paid for man; Just for unjust; that in such righteousness, To them by faith imputed, they may find Justification towards God, and peace Of conscience, which the law by ceremonies Cannot appease, nor man the moral part Perform, and, not performing, cannot live. So law appears imperfect, and but given With purpose to resign them, in full time, Up to a better covenant, disciplined - From shadowy types to truth, from flesh to spirit, From imposition of strict laws to free Acceptance of large grace, from servile fear To filial—works of law to works of faith. And, therefore, shall not Moses, though of God Highly beloved, being but the minister Of law, his people into Canaan lead ; But Joshua, whom the Gentiles Jesus call,” His name and office bearing, who shall quell * Stirring up stn against law.—“The law entered that the offence might abound.” (Rom. v. 20.) “By the law is the knowledge of sin.” (Rom. iii. 20.) * The Gentiles jesus call—The Septuagint always gives this name to Joshua (Ingoing). Book XII.-312–345.] PARADISE LOST. 319 The adversary Serpent, and bring back, Through the world's wilderness, long-wandered Man Safe to eternal Paradise of rest. - Meanwhile they, in their earthly Canaan placed, Long time shall dwell and prosper, but when sins National interrupt their public peace, - Provoking God to raise them enemies: From whom as oft he saves them penitent, By Judges first, then under Kings; of whom The second, both for piety renowned And puissant deeds, a promise shall receive Irrevocable, that his regal throne For ever shall endure. The like shall sing All prophecy, that of the royal stock Of David—so I name this king—shall rise A son, the Woman's Seed to thee foretold, Foretold to. Abraham, as in whom shall trust All nations; and to kings foretold, of kings The last—for of His reign shall be no end. But first, a long succession must ensue; And his next son, for wealth and wisdom famed, The clouded ark of God, till then in tents - Wandering, shall in a glorious temple enshrine. Such follow him as shall be registered e Part good. part bad; of bad the longer scroll; Whose foul idolatries, and other faults, Heaped to the popular sum, will so incense God, as to leave them, and expose their land, Their city, his temple, and his holy ark, With all his sacred things, a scorn and prey To that proud city, whose high walls thou sawest Left in confusion—Babylon thence called. There in captivity he lets them dwell The space of seventy years; then brings them back, 32O PARADISE LOST. [BOOK Al 1.-346-376, Remembering mercy, and his covenant sworn To David, 'stablished as the days of heaven. Returned from Babylon by leave of kings, Their lords, whom God disposed, the house of God They first re-edify, and for a while In mean estate live moderate, till, grown In wealth and multitude, factious they grow. But first among the priests dissension springs;" Men who attend the altar, and should most Endeavour peace. Their strife pollution brings Upon the temple itself. At last they seize The sceptre, and regard not David's sons; Then lose it to a stranger, that the true Anointed king, Messiah, might be born Barred of his right. Yet at his birth a star, Unseen before in heaven, proclaims him come, And guides the eastern sages, who inquire His place, to offer incense, myrrh, and gold : His place of birth a solemn angel tells To simple shepherds, keeping watch by night; They gladly thither haste, and by a quire Of squadroned angels hear his carol sung. A Virgin is his mother, but his sire The power of the Most High. He shall ascend The throne hereditary, and bound his reign With earth's wide bounds, his glory with the heavens. He ceased; discerning Adam, with such joy Surcharged, as had, like grief, been dewed in tears, Without the vent of words; which these he breathed: O prophet of glad tidings, finisher Of utmost hope now clear I understand * Among the priests dissension springs.-This is a reference to. the struggle for the high priesthood between Jason and Menelaus, in the time of Antiochus Epiphanes; and later between Aristobulus and Hyrcanus. Aristobulus united the kingly and priestly office in his person. flook XII-377-409) ge PARADISE LOST. & 32 I What oft my steadiest thoughts have searched in vain; Why our great Expectation should be called The Seed of Woman : Virgin Mother, hail High in the love of Heaven; yet from my loins Thou shalt proceed, and from thy womb the Son Of God Most High so God with man unites. Needs must the Serpent now his capital bruise Expect with mortal pain; say where and when Their fight; what stroke shall bruise the Victor's heel? To whom thus Michael : Dream not of their fight, As of a duel, or the local wounds Of head or heel; not, therefore, joins the Son Manhood to Godhead, with more strength to foil Thy enemy; nor so is overcome Satan, whose fall from heaven, a deadlier bruise, Disabled not to give thee thy death's wound; Which He, who comes thy Saviour, shall re-cure, Not by destroying Satan, but his works In thee, and in thy seed : nor can this be, But by fulfilling that which thou didst want, Obedience to the law of God, imposed On penalty of death; and suffering death, The penalty to thy transgression due, And due to theirs, which out of thine will grow ; So only can high justice rest appaid." The law of God exact he shall fulfil, * • Both by obedience and by love, though love Alone fulfil the law; thy punishment He shall endure, by coming in the flesh To a reproachful life and cursed death; Proclaiming life to all who shall believe In his redemption, and that his obedience, Imputed, becomes theirs by faith; His merits * Appaid. –Paid : appagato, Italian. " 322 PARADISE LOST. [Book XII.-4io-442 To save them, not their own, though legal, works. For this he shall live hated, be blasphemed, Seized on by force, judged, and to death condemned, A shameful and accursed, nailed to the cross By his own nation; slain for bringing life. But to the cross He nails thy enemies, The law that is against thee, and the sins Of all mankind with him there crucified, Never to hurt them more who rightly trust In this his satisfaction. So he dies, - But soon revives; death over Him no power Shall long usurp. Ere the third dawning light Return, the stars of morn shall see him rise Out of his grave, fresh as the dawning light, Thy ransom paid, which man from death redeems, His death for man, as many as offered life Neglect not, and the benefit embrace By faith not void of works. This Godlike act Annuls thy doom, the death thou shouldst have died, In sin for ever lost from life; this act - Shall bruise the head of Satan, crush his strength, Defeating Sin and Death, his two main arms, And fix far deeper in his head their stings Than temporal death shall bruise the Victor's heel, Or theirs whom he redeems—a death like sleep, A gentle wafting to immortal life. - Nor after resurrection shall he stay Longer on earth than certain times to appear To his disciples, men who in his life Still followed him; to them shall leave in charge To teach all nations what of him they learned, And his salvation; them who shall believe Baptising in the profluent stream,' the sign * Proftuent strewn-Milton seems to have thought that baptism should be administered in running, not in stagnant water. Book XII-443-476.] PARADISE LOST. 323 Of washing them from guilt of sin to life Pure, and in mind prepared, if so befall, For death, like that which the Redeemer died. All nations they shall teach; for, from that day, Not only to the sons of Abraham's loins - Salvation shall be preached, but to the sons Of Abraham's faith wherever through the world; So in his seed all nations shall be blest. Then to the Heaven of heavens he shall ascend With victory, triumphing through the air, Over his foes and thine; there shall surprise The Serpent, prince of air, and drag in chains Through all his realm, and there confounded leave; Then enter into glory, and resume His seat at God's right hand, exalted high Above all names in Heaven; and thence shall come, When this world's dissolution shall be ripe, - With glory and power, to judge both quick and dead; To judge the unfaithful dead, but to reward His faithful, and receive them into bliss, Whether in heaven or earth; for then the earth Shall all be Paradise, far happier place Than this of Eden, and far happier days. So spake the Archangel Michael; then paused. As at the world's great period; and our sire, Replete with joy and wonder, thus replied: O Goodness infinite, Goodness immense! That all this good of evil shall produce, And evil turn to good; more wonderful Than that which by creation first brought forth Light out of darkness | Full of doubt I stand, Whether I should repent me now of sin By me done, and occasioned, or rejoice Much more, that much more good thereof shall spring; 324 PARADISE LOST. . [Book XII-4,7-5io. To God more glory, more good-will to men From God, and over wrath grace shall abound. But say, if our Deliverer up to Heaven Must reascend, what will betide the few, His faithful, left among the unfaithful herd, The enemies of truth? Who, then, shall guide His people—who defend ? Will they not deal Worse with His followers than with Him they dealt 2. Be sure they will, said the Angel; but from Heaven He to his own a Comforter will send, - - The promise of the Father, who shall dwell His Spirit within them; and the law of faith, Working through love, upon their hearts shall write, To guide them in all truth, and also arm - With spiritual armour able to resist Satan's assaults, and quench his fiery darts; What man can do against them, not afraid, Though to the death ; against such cruelties With inward consolations recompensed, And oft supported so as shall amaze Their proudest persecutors; for the Spirit, Poured first on his apostles, whom he sends To evangelise the nations, then on all Baptised, shall them with wondrous gifts endue To speak all tongues, and do all miracles, As did their Lord before them. Thus they win Great numbers of each nation to receive With joy the tidings brought from Heaven: at length, Their ministry performed, and race well run, - - Their doctrine and their story written left, They die; but in their room, as they forewarn, Wolves shall succeed for teachers, grievous wolves, Who all the sacred mysteries of Heaven To their own vile advantages shall turn, Book XII.-511–540.] * PARADISE LOST. 325 : Of lucre and ambition, and the truth With superstitions and traditions taint, . . Left only in those written records pure, Though not but by the Spirit understood." Then shall they seek to avail themselves of names, Places, and titles, and with these to join Secular power, though feigning still to act By spiritual, to themselves appropriating The Spirit of God, promised alike, and given To all believers; and from that pretence, & Spiritual laws by carnal power shall force On every conscience; laws which none shall find Left them enrolled,” or what the spirit within Shall on the heart engrave. What will they, then, But force the Spirit of Grace itself, and bind His consort Liberty 2 What but unbuild His living temples, built by faith to stand, Their own faith, not another's 2 For, on earth, Who against faith and conscience can be heard Infallible 2 Yet many will presume: Whence heavy persecution shall arise On all who in the worship persevere Of spirit and truth ; the rest, far greater part, Will deem in outward rites and specious forms Religion satisfied; truth shall retire Bestuck with slanderous darts, and works of faith Rarely be found. So shall the world go on, To good malignant, to bad men benign, Under her own weight groaning, till the day Appear of respiration to the just, * Though not but by the Spirit understood—One of many passages which showed that Milton believed in Divine influence as a teaching power in man. Not an influence to render one man infallible against another, but tending to general enlightenment when rationally understood. e * Left them enrolled—Left written, written in the Scriptures. * 326 PARADISE LOST. tº [Book XII.-541-573 And vengeance to the wicked, at return Of Him so lately promised to thy aid, The woman's Seed ; obscurely then foretold, Now ampler known thy Saviour and thy Lord ; Last, in the clouds, from Heaven, to be revealed, In glory of the Father, to dissolve Satan with his perverted world; then raise From the conflagrant mass, purged and refined, New Heavens, new Earth, ages of endless date, Founded in righteousness, and peace, and love, To bring forth fruits, joy and eternal bliss. He ended; and thus Adam last replied: How soon hath thy prediction, Seer blest, Measured this transient world, the race of time, Till time stand fixed Beyond is all abyss, Eternity, whose end no eye can reach. - Greatly instructed I shall hence depart; Greatly in peace of thought; and have my fill Of knowledge, what this vessel can contain ; Beyond which was my folly to aspire. Henceforth I learn, that to obey is best, And love, with fear, the only God; to walk As in His presence, ever to observe His providence, and on him sole depend, Merciful over all his works, with good Still overcoming evil, and by small . Accomplishing great things; by things deemed weak Subverting worldly strong, and worldly wise By simply meek; that suffering for truth's sake Is fortitude to highest victory; And, to the faithful, death the gate of life; Taught this by His example, whom I now Acknowledge my Redeemer ever blest. Book XII-574-606.] PARADISE LOST. 327 To whom thus also the Angel last replied: This having learned, thou hast attained the sum Of wisdom; hope no higher, though all the stars Thou knewest by name, and all the ethereal powers, All secrets of the Deep, all Nature's works, Or works of God in heaven, air, earth, or sea, And all the riches of this world enjoyedst, And all the rule, one empire. Only add Deeds to thy knowledge answerable; add faith, Add virtue, patience, temperance; add love, By name to come called charity, the soul Of all the rest: then wilt thou not be loath To leave this Paradise, but shalt possess A paradise within thee, happier far. Let us descend now, therefore, from this top Of speculation; for the hour precise Exacts our parting hence. And, see the guards, By me encamped on yonder hill, expect Their motion, at whose front a flaming sword, In signal of remove, waves fiercely round. We may no longer stay: go, waken Eve; Her also I with gentle dreams have calmed, Portending good, and all her spirits composed To meek submission; thou, at season fit, Let her with thee partake what thou hast heard, Chiefly, what may concern her faith to know, The great deliverance by her seed to come— For by the Woman's seed—on all mankind; That ye may live, which will be many days, Both in one faith unanimous, though sad, With cause, for evils past, yet much more cheered With meditation on the happy end. - He ended, and they both descend the hill 328 PARADISE LOST. (Book xii-º-º: Descended, Adam to the bower, where Eve Lay sleeping, ran before, but found her waked; And thus with words not sad she him received : Whence thou return'st, and whither went'st, I know; For God is also in sleep; and dreams advise, Which He hath sent propitious, some great good Presaging, since, with sorrow and heart's distress Wearied, I fell asleep. But now lead on, In me is no delay; with thee to go, Is to stay here; without thee here to stay, Is to go hence unwilling ; thou to me Art all things under heaven, all places thou, Who for my wilful crime art banished hence. This further consolation yet secure I carry hence; though all by me is lost, Such favour I, unworthy, am vouchsafed, By me the Promised Seed shall all restore. So spake our mother Eve; and Adam heard, Well pleased, but answered not ; for now, too nigh The Archangel stood ; and from the other hill To their fixed station, all in bright array, The Cherubim descended, on the ground Gliding meteorus, as evening mist, Risen from a river, o'er the marish glides, And gathers ground fast at the labourer's heel, Homeward returning. High in front advanced, The brandished sword of God before them blazed, Fierce as a comet; which, with torrid heat, And vapour as the Lybian air adust, Began to parch that temperate clime; whereat In either hand the hastening Angel caught Our lingering parents, and to the eastern gate Led them direct, and down the cliff as fast ºr ſae |-:Z· £Źź-- ----№.- â€.£§ !:- £- º ź- - - - … … - ,ſ=--- , % %% ©- --------- №ae, ::=№. |-ſ. ----·_№. !!!!!!!!!!!!!! ---- ···}::= | … |-…§…) № |-Ź№ ae 2. = =№ §.2. Book XVI, line 645. but wiped them soon. y Some natural tears they dropt BOOK XII. 640–649.] PARADISE LOST. 329 To the subjected plain; then disappeared. They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld Of Paradise, so late their happy seat, Waved over by that flaming brand ; the gate With dreadful faces thronged, and fiery arms. Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon; The world was all before them, where to choose Their place of rest, and Providence their guide: They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow, Through Eden took their solitary way. - THE END. ||||I|| 49 4362 - - - - - - - - - - - - | | | | | - - - - - - - - - _