Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Queen Mab. A Philosophical Poem, With Notes. by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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Queen Mab. A Philosophical Poem, With Notes.

    By Percy Bysshe Shelley



    [An edition (250 copies) of "Queen Mab" was printed at London in the summer of 1813 by Shelley himself, whose name, as author and printer, appears on the title-page. Of this edition about seventy copies were privately distributed. Sections 1, 2, 8, and 9 were afterwards rehandled, and the intermediate sections here and there revised and altered; and of this new text sections 1 and 2 were published by Shelley in the "Alastor" volume of 1816, under the title, "The Daemon of the World". The remainder lay unpublished till 1876, when sections 8 and 9 were printed by Mr. H. Buxton Forman, C.B., from a printed copy of "Queen Mab" with Shelley's manuscript corrections.

    "Queen Mab" was probably written during the year 1812 - it is first heard of at Lynmouth, August 18, 1812 - but the text may be assumed to include earlier material.]

    ECRASEZ L'INFAME! - Correspondance de Voltaire.

    Avia Pieridum peragro loca, nullius ante
    Trita solo; juvat integros accedere fonteis;
    Atque haurire: juvatque novos decerpere flores.

    ...

    Unde prius nulli velarint tempora musae.
    Primum quod magnis doceo de rebus; et arctis
    Religionum animos nodis exsolvere pergo. - Lucret. lib. 4.

    Dos pon sto, kai kosmon kineso. - Archimedes.


    TO HARRIET *****.

    Whose is the love that gleaming through the world,
    Wards off the poisonous arrow of its scorn?
    Whose is the warm and partial praise,
    Virtue's most sweet reward?

    Beneath whose looks did my reviving soul
    Riper in truth and virtuous daring grow?
    Whose eyes have I gazed fondly on,
    And loved mankind the more?

    HARRIET! on thine: - thou wert my purer mind;
    Thou wert the inspiration of my song;
    Thine are these early wilding flowers,
    Though garlanded by me.

    Then press into thy breast this pledge of love;
    And know, though time may change and years may roll,
    Each floweret gathered in my heart
    It consecrates to thine.


    QUEEN MAB.

    1.

    How wonderful is Death,
    Death and his brother Sleep!
    One, pale as yonder waning moon
    With lips of lurid blue;
    The other, rosy as the morn
    When throned on ocean's wave
    It blushes o'er the world:
    Yet both so passing wonderful!

    Hath then the gloomy Power
    Whose reign is in the tainted sepulchres
    Seized on her sinless soul?
    Must then that peerless form
    Which love and admiration cannot view
    Without a beating heart, those azure veins
    Which steal like streams along a field of snow,
    That lovely outline, which is fair
    As breathing marble, perish?
    Must putrefaction's breath
    Leave nothing of this heavenly sight
    But loathsomeness and ruin?
    Spare nothing but a gloomy theme,
    On which the lightest heart might moralize?
    Or is it only a sweet slumber
    Stealing o'er sensation,
    Which the breath of roseate morning
    Chaseth into darkness?
    Will Ianthe wake again,
    And give that faithful bosom joy
    Whose sleepless spirit waits to catch
    Light, life and rapture from her smile?

    Yes! she will wake again,
    Although her glowing limbs are motionless,
    And silent those sweet lips,
    Once breathing eloquence,
    That might have soothed a tiger's rage,
    Or thawed the cold heart of a conqueror.
    Her dewy eyes are closed,
    And on their lids, whose texture fine
    Scarce hides the dark blue orbs beneath,
    The baby Sleep is pillowed:
    Her golden tresses shade
    The bosom's stainless pride,
    Curling like tendrils of the parasite
    Around a marble column.

    Hark! whence that rushing sound?
    'Tis like the wondrous strain
    That round a lonely ruin swells,
    Which, wandering on the echoing shore,
    The enthusiast hears at evening:
    'Tis softer than the west wind's sigh;
    'Tis wilder than the unmeasured notes
    Of that strange lyre whose strings
    The genii of the breezes sweep:
    Those lines of rainbow light
    Are like the moonbeams when they fall
    Through some cathedral window, but the tints
    Are such as may not find
    Comparison on earth.

    Behold the chariot of the Fairy Queen!
    Celestial coursers paw the unyielding air;
    Their filmy pennons at her word they furl,
    And stop obedient to the reins of light:
    These the Queen of Spells drew in,
    She spread a charm around the spot,
    And leaning graceful from the aethereal car,
    Long did she gaze, and silently,
    Upon the slumbering maid.

    Oh! not the visioned poet in his dreams,
    When silvery clouds float through the 'wildered brain,
    When every sight of lovely, wild and grand
    Astonishes, enraptures, elevates,
    When fancy at a glance combines
    The wondrous and the beautiful, -
    So bright, so fair, so wild a shape
    Hath ever yet beheld,
    As that which reined the coursers of the air,
    And poured the magic of her gaze
    Upon the maiden's sleep.

    The broad and yellow moon
    Shone dimly through her form -
    That form of faultless symmetry;
    The pearly and pellucid car
    Moved not the moonlight's line:
    'Twas not an earthly pageant:
    Those who had looked upon the sight,
    Passing all human glory,
    Saw not the yellow moon,
    Saw not the mortal scene,
    Heard not the night-wind's rush,
    Heard not an earthly sound,
    Saw but the fairy pageant,
    Heard but the heavenly strains
    That filled the lonely dwelling.

    The Fairy's frame was slight, yon fibrous cloud,
    That catches but the palest tinge of even,
    And which the straining eye can hardly seize
    When melting into eastern twilight's shadow,
    Were scarce so thin, so slight; but the fair star
    That gems the glittering coronet of morn,
    Sheds not a light so mild, so powerful,
    As that which, bursting from the Fairy's form,
    Spread a purpureal halo round the scene,
    Yet with an undulating motion,
    Swayed to her outline gracefully.

    From her celestial car
    The Fairy Queen descended,
    And thrice she waved her wand
    Circled with wreaths of amaranth:
    Her thin and misty form
    Moved with the moving air,
    And the clear silver tones,
    As thus she spoke, were such
    As are unheard by all but gifted ear.

    FAIRY:
    'Stars! your balmiest influence shed!
    Elements! your wrath suspend!
    Sleep, Ocean, in the rocky bounds
    That circle thy domain!
    Let not a breath be seen to stir
    Around yon grass-grown ruin's height,
    Let even the restless gossamer
    Sleep on the moveless air!
    Soul of Ianthe! thou,
    Judged alone worthy of the envied boon,
    That waits the good and the sincere; that waits
    Those who have struggled, and with resolute will
    Vanquished earth's pride and meanness, burst the chains,
    The icy chains of custom, and have shone
    The day-stars of their age; - Soul of Ianthe!
    Awake! arise!'

    Sudden arose
    Ianthe's Soul; it stood
    All beautiful in naked purity,
    The perfect semblance of its bodily frame.
    Instinct with inexpressible beauty and grace,
    Each stain of earthliness
    Had passed away, it reassumed
    Its native dignity, and stood
    Immortal amid ruin.

    Upon the couch the body lay
    Wrapped in the depth of slumber:
    Its features were fixed and meaningless,
    Yet animal life was there,
    And every organ yet performed
    Its natural functions: 'twas a sight
    Of wonder to behold the body and soul.
    The self-same lineaments, the same
    Marks of identity were there:
    Yet, oh, how different! One aspires to Heaven,
    Pants for its sempiternal heritage,
    And ever-changing, ever-rising still,
    Wantons in endless being.
    The other, for a time the unwilling sport
    Of circumstance and passion, struggles on;
    Fleets through its sad duration rapidly:
    Then, like an useless and worn-out machine,
    Rots, perishes, and passes.

    FAIRY:
    'Spirit! who hast dived so deep;
    Spirit! who hast soared so high;
    Thou the fearless, thou the mild,
    Accept the boon thy worth hath earned,
    Ascend the car with me.'

    SPIRIT:
    'Do I dream? Is this new feeling
    But a visioned ghost of slumber?
    If indeed I am a soul,
    A free, a disembodied soul,
    Speak again to me.'

    FAIRY:
    'I am the Fairy MAB: to me 'tis given
    The wonders of the human world to keep:
    The secrets of the immeasurable past,
    In the unfailing consciences of men,
    Those stern, unflattering chroniclers, I find:
    The future, from the causes which arise
    In each event, I gather: not the sting
    Which retributive memory implants
    In the hard bosom of the selfish man;
    Nor that ecstatic and exulting throb
    Which virtue's votary feels when he sums up
    The thoughts and actions of a well-spent day,
    Are unforeseen, unregistered by me:
    And it is yet permitted me, to rend
    The veil of mortal frailty, that the spirit,
    Clothed in its changeless purity, may know
    How soonest to accomplish the great end
    For which it hath its being, and may taste
    That peace, which in the end all life will share.
    This is the meed of virtue; happy Soul,
    Ascend the car with me!'

    The chains of earth's immurement
    Fell from Ianthe's spirit;
    They shrank and brake like bandages of straw
    Beneath a wakened giant's strength.
    She knew her glorious change,
    And felt in apprehension uncontrolled
    New raptures opening round:
    Each day-dream of her mortal life,
    Each frenzied vision of the slumbers
    That closed each well-spent day,
    Seemed now to meet reality.

    The Fairy and the Soul proceeded;
    The silver clouds disparted;
    And as the car of magic they ascended,
    Again the speechless music swelled,
    Again the coursers of the air
    Unfurled their azure pennons, and the Queen
    Shaking the beamy reins
    Bade them pursue their way.

    The magic car moved on.
    The night was fair, and countless stars
    Studded Heaven's dark blue vault, -
    Just o'er the eastern wave
    Peeped the first faint smile of morn: -
    The magic car moved on -
    From the celestial hoofs
    The atmosphere in flaming sparkles flew,
    And where the burning wheels
    Eddied above the mountain's loftiest peak,
    Was traced a line of lightning.
    Now it flew far above a rock,
    The utmost verge of earth,
    The rival of the Andes, whose dark brow
    Lowered o'er the silver sea.

    Far, far below the chariot's path,
    Calm as a slumbering babe,
    Tremendous Ocean lay.
    The mirror of its stillness showed
    The pale and waning stars,
    The chariot's fiery track,
    And the gray light of morn
    Tinging those fleecy clouds
    That canopied the dawn.
    Seemed it, that the chariot's way
    Lay through the midst of an immense concave,
    Radiant with million constellations, tinged
    With shades of infinite colour,
    And semicircled with a belt
    Flashing incessant meteors.

    The magic car moved on.
    As they approached their goal
    The coursers seemed to gather speed;
    The sea no longer was distinguished; earth
    Appeared a vast and shadowy sphere;
    The sun's unclouded orb
    Rolled through the black concave;
    Its rays of rapid light
    Parted around the chariot's swifter course,
    And fell, like ocean's feathery spray
    Dashed from the boiling surge
    Before a vessel's prow.

    The magic car moved on.
    Earth's distant orb appeared
    The smallest light that twinkles in the heaven;
    Whilst round the chariot's way
    Innumerable systems rolled,
    And countless spheres diffused
    An ever-varying glory.
    It was a sight of wonder: some
    Were horned like the crescent moon;
    Some shed a mild and silver beam
    Like Hesperus o'er the western sea;
    Some dashed athwart with trains of flame,
    Like worlds to death and ruin driven;
    Some shone like suns, and, as the chariot passed,
    Eclipsed all other light.

    Spirit of Nature! here!
    In this interminable wilderness
    Of worlds, at whose immensity
    Even soaring fancy staggers,
    Here is thy fitting temple.
    Yet not the lightest leaf
    That quivers to the passing breeze
    Is less instinct with thee:
    Yet not the meanest worm
    That lurks in graves and fattens on the dead
    Less shares thy eternal breath.
    Spirit of Nature! thou!
    Imperishable as this scene,
    Here is thy fitting temple.

    2.

    If solitude hath ever led thy steps
    To the wild Ocean's echoing shore,
    And thou hast lingered there,
    Until the sun's broad orb
    Seemed resting on the burnished wave,
    Thou must have marked the lines
    Of purple gold, that motionless
    Hung o'er the sinking sphere:
    Thou must have marked the billowy clouds
    Edged with intolerable radiancy
    Towering like rocks of jet
    Crowned with a diamond wreath.
    And yet there is a moment,
    When the sun's highest point
    Peeps like a star o'er Ocean's western edge,
    When those far clouds of feathery gold,
    Shaded with deepest purple, gleam
    Like islands on a dark blue sea;
    Then has thy fancy soared above the earth,
    And furled its wearied wing
    Within the Fairy's fane.

    Yet not the golden islands
    Gleaming in yon flood of light,
    Nor the feathery curtains
    Stretching o'er the sun's bright couch,
    Nor the burnished Ocean waves
    Paving that gorgeous dome,
    So fair, so wonderful a sight
    As Mab's aethereal palace could afford.
    Yet likest evening's vault, that faery Hall!
    As Heaven, low resting on the wave,it spread
    Its floors of flashing light,
    Its vast and azure dome,
    Its fertile golden islands
    Floating on a silver sea;
    Whilst suns their mingling beamings darted
    Through clouds of circumambient darkness,
    And pearly battlements around
    Looked o'er the immense of Heaven.

    The magic car no longer moved.
    The Fairy and the Spirit
    Entered the Hall of Spells:
    Those golden clouds
    That rolled in glittering billows
    Beneath the azure canopy
    With the aethereal footsteps trembled not:
    The light and crimson mists,
    Floating to strains of thrilling melody
    Through that unearthly dwelling,
    Yielded to every movement of the will.
    Upon their passive swell the Spirit leaned,
    And, for the varied bliss that pressed around,
    Used not the glorious privilege
    Of virtue and of wisdom.

    'Spirit!' the Fairy said,
    And pointed to the gorgeous dome,
    'This is a wondrous sight
    And mocks all human grandeur;
    But, were it virtue's only meed, to dwell
    In a celestial palace, all resigned
    To pleasurable impulses, immured
    Within the prison of itself, the will
    Of changeless Nature would be unfulfilled.
    Learn to make others happy. Spirit, come!
    This is thine high reward: - the past shall rise;
    Thou shalt behold the present; I will teach
    The secrets of the future.'

    The Fairy and the Spirit
    Approached the overhanging battlement. -
    Below lay stretched the universe!
    There, far as the remotest line
    That bounds imagination's flight,
    Countless and unending orbs
    In mazy motion intermingled,
    Yet still fulfilled immutably
    Eternal Nature's law.
    Above, below, around,
    The circling systems formed
    A wilderness of harmony;
    Each with undeviating aim,
    In eloquent silence, through the depths of space
    Pursued its wondrous way.

    There was a little light
    That twinkled in the misty distance:
    None but a spirit's eye
    Might ken that rolling orb;
    None but a spirit's eye,
    And in no other place
    But that celestial dwelling, might behold
    Each action of this earth's inhabitants.
    But matter, space and time
    In those aereal mansions cease to act;
    And all-prevailing wisdom, when it reaps
    The harvest of its excellence, o'er-bounds
    Those obstacles, of which an earthly soul
    Fears to attempt the conquest.

    The Fairy pointed to the earth.
    The Spirit's intellectual eye
    Its kindred beings recognized.
    The thronging thousands, to a passing view,
    Seemed like an ant-hill's citizens.
    How wonderful! that even
    The passions, prejudices, interests,
    That sway the meanest being, the weak touch
    That moves the finest nerve,
    And in one human brain
    Causes the faintest thought, becomes a link
    In the great chain of Nature.

    'Behold,' the Fairy cried,
    'Palmyra's ruined palaces! -
    Behold! where grandeur frowned;
    Behold! where pleasure smiled;
    What now remains? - the memory
    Of senselessness and shame -
    What is immortal there?
    Nothing - it stands to tell
    A melancholy tale, to give
    An awful warning: soon
    Oblivion will steal silently
    The remnant of its fame.
    Monarchs and conquerors there
    Proud o'er prostrate millions trod -
    The earthquakes of the human race;
    Like them, forgotten when the ruin
    That marks their shock is past.

    'Beside the eternal Nile,
    The Pyramids have risen.
    Nile shall pursue his changeless way:
    Those Pyramids shall fall;
    Yea! not a stone shall stand to tell
    The spot whereon they stood!
    Their very site shall be forgotten,
    As is their builder's name!

    'Behold yon sterile spot;
    Where now the wandering Arab's tent
    Flaps in the desert-blast.
    There once old Salem's haughty fane
    Reared high to Heaven its thousand golden domes,
    And in the blushing face of day
    Exposed its shameful glory.
    Oh! many a widow, many an orphan cursed
    The building of that fane; and many a father;
    Worn out with toil and slavery, implored
    The poor man's God to sweep it from the earth,
    And spare his children the detested task
    Of piling stone on stone, and poisoning
    The choicest days of life,
    To soothe a dotard's vanity.
    There an inhuman and uncultured race
    Howled hideous praises to their Demon-God;
    They rushed to war, tore from the mother's womb
    The unborn child, - old age and infancy
    Promiscuous perished; their victorious arms
    Left not a soul to breathe. Oh! they were fiends:
    But what was he who taught them that the God
    Of nature and benevolence hath given
    A special sanction to the trade of blood?
    His name and theirs are fading, and the tales
    Of this barbarian nation, which imposture
    Recites till terror credits, are pursuing
    Itself into forgetfulness.

    'Where Athens, Rome, and Sparta stood,
    There is a moral desert now:
    The mean and miserable huts,
    The yet more wretched palaces,
    Contrasted with those ancient fanes,
    Now crumbling to oblivion;
    The long and lonely colonnades,
    Through which the ghost of Freedom stalks,
    Seem like a well-known tune,
    Which in some dear scene we have loved to hear,
    Remembered now in sadness.
    But, oh! how much more changed,
    How gloomier is the contrast
    Of human nature there!
    Where Socrates expired, a tyrant's slave,
    A coward and a fool, spreads death around -
    Then, shuddering, meets his own.
    Where Cicero and Antoninus lived,
    A cowled and hypocritical monk
    Prays, curses and deceives.

    'Spirit, ten thousand years
    Have scarcely passed away,
    Since, in the waste where now the savage drinks
    His enemy's blood, and aping Europe's sons,
    Wakes the unholy song of war, Arose a stately city,
    Metropolis of the western continent:
    There, now, the mossy column-stone,
    Indented by Time's unrelaxing grasp,
    Which once appeared to brave
    All, save its country's ruin;
    There the wide forest scene,
    Rude in the uncultivated loveliness
    Of gardens long run wild,
    Seems, to the unwilling sojourner, whose steps
    Chance in that desert has delayed,
    Thus to have stood since earth was what it is.
    Yet once it was the busiest haunt,
    Whither, as to a common centre, flocked
    Strangers, and ships, and merchandise:
    Once peace and freedom blessed
    The cultivated plain:
    But wealth, that curse of man,
    Blighted the bud of its prosperity:
    Virtue and wisdom, truth and liberty,
    Fled, to return not, until man shall know
    That they alone can give the bliss
    Worthy a soul that claims
    Its kindred with eternity.

    'There's not one atom of yon earth
    But once was living man;
    Nor the minutest drop of rain,
    That hangeth in its thinnest cloud,
    But flowed in human veins:
    And from the burning plains
    Where Libyan monsters yell,
    From the most gloomy glens
    Of Greenland's sunless clime,
    To where the golden fields
    Of fertile England spread
    Their harvest to the day,
    Thou canst not find one spot
    Whereon no city stood.

    'How strange is human pride!
    I tell thee that those living things,
    To whom the fragile blade of grass,
    That springeth in the morn
    And perisheth ere noon,
    Is an unbounded world;
    I tell thee that those viewless beings,
    Whose mansion is the smallest particle
    Of the impassive atmosphere,
    Think, feel and live like man;
    That their affections and antipathies,
    Like his, produce the laws
    Ruling their moral state;
    And the minutest throb
    That through their frame diffuses
    The slightest, faintest motion,
    Is fixed and indispensable
    As the majestic laws
    That rule yon rolling orbs.'

    The Fairy paused. The Spirit,
    In ecstasy of admiration, felt
    All knowledge of the past revived; the events
    Of old and wondrous times,
    Which dim tradition interruptedly
    Teaches the credulous vulgar, were unfolded
    In just perspective to the view;
    Yet dim from their infinitude.
    The Spirit seemed to stand
    High on an isolated pinnacle;
    The flood of ages combating below,
    The depth of the unbounded universe
    Above, and all around
    Nature's unchanging harmony.

    3.

    'Fairy!' the Spirit said,
    And on the Queen of Spells
    Fixed her aethereal eyes,
    'I thank thee. Thou hast given
    A boon which I will not resign, and taught
    A lesson not to be unlearned. I know
    The past, and thence I will essay to glean
    A warning for the future, so that man
    May profit by his errors, and derive
    Experience from his folly:
    For, when the power of imparting joy
    Is equal to the will, the human soul
    Requires no other Heaven.'

    MAB:
    'Turn thee, surpassing Spirit!
    Much yet remains unscanned.
    Thou knowest how great is man,
    Thou knowest his imbecility:
    Yet learn thou what he is:
    Yet learn the lofty destiny
    Which restless time prepares
    For every living soul.

    'Behold a gorgeous palace, that, amid
    Yon populous city rears its thousand towers
    And seems itself a city. Gloomy troops
    Of sentinels, in stern and silent ranks,
    Encompass it around: the dweller there
    Cannot be free and happy; hearest thou not
    The curses of the fatherless, the groans
    Of those who have no friend? He passes on:
    The King, the wearer of a gilded chain
    That binds his soul to abjectness, the fool
    Whom courtiers nickname monarch, whilst a slave
    Even to the basest appetites - that man
    Heeds not the shriek of penury; he smiles
    At the deep curses which the destitute
    Mutter in secret, and a sullen joy
    Pervades his bloodless heart when thousands groan
    But for those morsels which his wantonness
    Wastes in unjoyous revelry, to save
    All that they love from famine: when he hears
    The tale of horror, to some ready-made face
    Of hypocritical assent he turns,
    Smothering the glow of shame, that, spite of him,
    Flushes his bloated cheek.
    Now to the meal
    Of silence, grandeur, and excess, he drags
    His palled unwilling appetite. If gold,
    Gleaming around, and numerous viands culled
    From every clime, could force the loathing sense
    To overcome satiety, - if wealth
    The spring it draws from poisons not, - or vice,
    Unfeeling, stubborn vice, converteth not
    Its food to deadliest venom; then that king
    Is happy; and the peasant who fulfils
    His unforced task, when he returns at even,
    And by the blazing faggot meets again
    Her welcome for whom all his toil is sped,
    Tastes not a sweeter meal.
    Behold him now
    Stretched on the gorgeous couch; his fevered brain
    Reels dizzily awhile: but ah! too soon
    The slumber of intemperance subsides,
    And conscience, that undying serpent, calls
    Her venomous brood to their nocturnal task.
    Listen! he speaks! oh! mark that frenzied eye -
    Oh! mark that deadly visage.'

    KING:
    'No cessation!
    Oh! must this last for ever? Awful Death,
    I wish, yet fear to clasp thee! - Not one moment
    Of dreamless sleep! O dear and blessed peace!
    Why dost thou shroud thy vestal purity
    In penury and dungeons? wherefore lurkest
    With danger, death, and solitude; yet shunn'st
    The palace I have built thee? Sacred peace!
    Oh visit me but once, but pitying shed
    One drop of balm upon my withered soul.'

    THE FAIRY:
    'Vain man! that palace is the virtuous heart,
    And Peace defileth not her snowy robes
    In such a shed as thine. Hark! yet he mutters;
    His slumbers are but varied agonies,
    They prey like scorpions on the springs of life.
    There needeth not the hell that bigots frame
    To punish those who err: earth in itself
    Contains at once the evil and the cure;
    And all-sufficing Nature can chastise
    Those who transgress her law, - she only knows
    How justly to proportion to the fault
    The punishment it merits.
    Is it strange
    That this poor wretch should pride him in his woe?
    Take pleasure in his abjectness, and hug
    The scorpion that consumes him? Is it strange
    That, placed on a conspicuous throne of thorns,
    Grasping an iron sceptre, and immured
    Within a splendid prison, whose stern bounds
    Shut him from all that's good or dear on earth,
    His soul asserts not its humanity?
    That man's mild nature rises not in war
    Against a king's employ? No - 'tis not strange.
    He, like the vulgar, thinks, feels, acts and lives
    Just as his father did; the unconquered powers
    Of precedent and custom interpose
    Between a KING and virtue. Stranger yet,
    To those who know not Nature, nor deduce
    The future from the present, it may seem,
    That not one slave, who suffers from the crimes
    Of this unnatural being; not one wretch,
    Whose children famish, and whose nuptial bed
    Is earth's unpitying bosom, rears an arm
    To dash him from his throne!
    Those gilded flies
    That, basking in the sunshine of a court,
    Fatten on its corruption! - what are they?
    - The drones of the community; they feed
    On the mechanic's labour: the starved hind
    For them compels the stubborn glebe to yield
    Its unshared harvests; and yon squalid form,
    Leaner than fleshless misery, that wastes
    A sunless life in the unwholesome mine,
    Drags out in labour a protracted death,
    To glut their grandeur; many faint with toil,
    That few may know the cares and woe of sloth.

    'Whence, think'st thou, kings and parasites arose?
    Whence that unnatural line of drones, who heap
    Toil and unvanquishable penury
    On those who build their palaces, and bring
    Their daily bread? - From vice, black loathsome vice;
    From rapine, madness, treachery, and wrong;
    From all that 'genders misery, and makes
    Of earth this thorny wilderness; from lust,
    Revenge, and murder...And when Reason's voice,
    Loud as the voice of Nature, shall have waked
    The nations; and mankind perceive that vice
    Is discord, war, and misery; that virtue
    Is peace, and happiness and harmony;
    When man's maturer nature shall disdain
    The playthings of its childhood; - kingly glare
    Will lose its power to dazzle; its authority
    Will silently pass by; the gorgeous throne
    Shall stand unnoticed in the regal hall,
    Fast falling to decay; whilst falsehood's trade
    Shall be as hateful and unprofitable
    As that of truth is now.
    Where is the fame
    Which the vainglorious mighty of the earth
    Seek to eternize? Oh! the faintest sound
    From Time's light footfall, the minutest wave
    That swells the flood of ages, whelms in nothing
    The unsubstantial bubble. Ay! today
    Stern is the tyrant's mandate, red the gaze
    That flashes desolation, strong the arm
    That scatters multitudes. To-morrow comes!
    That mandate is a thunder-peal that died
    In ages past; that gaze, a transient flash
    On which the midnight closed, and on that arm
    The worm has made his meal.
    The virtuous man,
    Who, great in his humility, as kings
    Are little in their grandeur; he who leads
    Invincibly a life of resolute good,
    And stands amid the silent dungeon depths
    More free and fearless than the trembling judge,
    Who, clothed in venal power, vainly strove
    To bind the impassive spirit; - when he falls,
    His mild eye beams benevolence no more:
    Withered the hand outstretched but to relieve;
    Sunk Reason's simple eloquence, that rolled
    But to appal the guilty. Yes! the grave
    Hath quenched that eye, and Death's relentless frost
    Withered that arm: but the unfading fame
    Which Virtue hangs upon its votary's tomb;
    The deathless memory of that man, whom kings
    Call to their mind and tremble; the remembrance
    With which the happy spirit contemplates
    Its well-spent pilgrimage on earth,
    Shall never pass away.

    'Nature rejects the monarch, not the man;
    The subject, not the citizen: for kings
    And subjects, mutual foes, forever play
    A losing game into each other's hands,
    Whose stakes are vice and misery. The man
    Of virtuous soul commands not, nor obeys.
    Power, like a desolating pestilence,
    Pollutes whate'er it touches; and obedience,
    Bane of all genius, virtue, freedom, truth,
    Makes slaves of men, and, of the human frame,
    A mechanized automaton.
    When Nero,
    High over flaming Rome, with savage joy
    Lowered like a fiend, drank with enraptured ear
    The shrieks of agonizing death, beheld
    The frightful desolation spread, and felt
    A new-created sense within his soul
    Thrill to the sight, and vibrate to the sound;
    Think'st thou his grandeur had not overcome
    The force of human kindness? and, when Rome,
    With one stern blow, hurled not the tyrant down,
    Crushed not the arm red with her dearest blood
    Had not submissive abjectness destroyed
    Nature's suggestions?
    Look on yonder earth:
    The golden harvests spring; the unfailing sun
    Sheds light and life; the fruits, the flowers, the trees,
    Arise in due succession; all things speak
    Peace, harmony, and love. The universe,
    In Nature's silent eloquence, declares
    That all fulfil the works of love and joy, -
    All but the outcast, Man. He fabricates
    The sword which stabs his peace; he cherisheth
    The snakes that gnaw his heart; he raiseth up
    The tyrant, whose delight is in his woe,
    Whose sport is in his agony. Yon sun,
    Lights it the great alone? Yon silver beams,
    Sleep they less sweetly on the cottage thatch
    Than on the dome of kings? Is mother Earth
    A step-dame to her numerous sons, who earn
    Her unshared gifts with unremitting toil;
    A mother only to those puling babes
    Who, nursed in ease and luxury, make men
    The playthings of their babyhood, and mar,
    In self-important childishness, that peace
    Which men alone appreciate?

    'Spirit of Nature! no.
    The pure diffusion of thy essence throbs
    Alike in every human heart.
    Thou, aye, erectest there
    Thy throne of power unappealable:
    Thou art the judge beneath whose nod
    Man's brief and frail authority
    Is powerless as the wind
    That passeth idly by.
    Thine the tribunal which surpasseth
    The show of human justice,
    As God surpasses man.

    'Spirit of Nature! thou
    Life of interminable multitudes;
    Soul of those mighty spheres
    Whose changeless paths through
    Heaven's deep silence lie;
    Soul of that smallest being,
    The dwelling of whose life
    Is one faint April sun-gleam; -
    Man, like these passive things,
    Thy will unconsciously fulfilleth:
    Like theirs, his age of endless peace,
    Which time is fast maturing,
    Will swiftly, surely come;
    And the unbounded frame, which thou pervadest,
    Will be without a flaw
    Marring its perfect symmetry.

    4.

    'How beautiful this night! the balmiest sigh,
    Which vernal zephyrs breathe in evening's ear,
    Were discord to the speaking quietude
    That wraps this moveless scene. Heaven's ebon vault,
    Studded with stars unutterably bright,
    Through which the moon's unclouded grandeur rolls,
    Seems like a canopy which love had spread
    To curtain her sleeping world. Yon gentle hills,
    Robed in a garment of untrodden snow;
    Yon darksome rocks, whence icicles depend,
    So stainless, that their white and glittering spires
    Tinge not the moon's pure beam; yon castled steep,
    Whose banner hangeth o'er the time-worn tower
    So idly, that rapt fancy deemeth it
    A metaphor of peace; - all form a scene
    Where musing Solitude might love to lift
    Her soul above this sphere of earthliness;
    Where Silence undisturbed might watch alone,
    So cold, so bright, so still.
    The orb of day,
    In southern climes, o'er ocean's waveless field
    Sinks sweetly smiling: not the faintest breath
    Steals o'er the unruffled deep; the clouds of eve
    Reflect unmoved the lingering beam of day;
    And vesper's image on the western main
    Is beautifully still. To-morrow comes:
    Cloud upon cloud, in dark and deepening mass,
    Roll o'er the blackened waters; the deep roar
    Of distant thunder mutters awfully;
    Tempest unfolds its pinion o'er the gloom
    That shrouds the boiling surge; the pitiless fiend,
    With all his winds and lightnings, tracks his prey;
    The torn deep yawns, - the vessel finds a grave
    Beneath its jagged gulf.
    Ah! whence yon glare
    That fires the arch of Heaven! - that dark red smoke
    Blotting the silver moon? The stars are quenched
    In darkness, and the pure and spangling snow
    Gleams faintly through the gloom that gathers round!
    Hark to that roar, whose swift and deaf'ning peals
    In countless echoes through the mountains ring,
    Startling pale Midnight on her starry throne!
    Now swells the intermingling din; the jar
    Frequent and frightful of the bursting bomb;
    The falling beam, the shriek, the groan, the shout,
    The ceaseless clangour, and the rush of men
    Inebriate with rage: - loud, and more loud
    The discord grows; till pale Death shuts the scene,
    And o'er the conqueror and the conquered draws
    His cold and bloody shroud. - Of all the men
    Whom day's departing beam saw blooming there,
    In proud and vigorous health; of all the hearts
    That beat with anxious life at sunset there;
    How few survive, how few are beating now!
    All is deep silence, like the fearful calm
    That slumbers in the storm's portentous pause;
    Save when the frantic wail of widowed love
    Comes shuddering on the blast, or the faint moan
    With which some soul bursts from the frame of clay
    Wrapped round its struggling powers.
    The gray morn
    Dawns on the mournful scene; the sulphurous smoke
    Before the icy wind slow rolls away,
    And the bright beams of frosty morning dance
    Along the spangling snow. There tracks of blood
    Even to the forest's depth, and scattered arms,
    And lifeless warriors, whose hard lineaments
    Death's self could change not, mark the dreadful path
    Of the outsallying victors: far behind,
    Black ashes note where their proud city stood.
    Within yon forest is a gloomy glen -
    Each tree which guards its darkness from the day,
    Waves o'er a warrior's tomb.
    I see thee shrink,
    Surpassing Spirit! - wert thou human else?
    I see a shade of doubt and horror fleet
    Across thy stainless features: yet fear not;
    This is no unconnected misery,
    Nor stands uncaused, and irretrievable.
    Man's evil nature, that apology
    Which kings who rule, and cowards who crouch, set up
    For their unnumbered crimes, sheds not the blood
    Which desolates the discord-wasted land.
    From kings, and priests, and statesmen, war arose,
    Whose safety is man's deep unbettered woe,
    Whose grandeur his debasement. Let the axe
    Strike at the root, the poison-tree will fall;
    And where its venomed exhalations spread
    Ruin, and death, and woe, where millions lay
    Quenching the serpent's famine, and their bones
    Bleaching unburied in the putrid blast,
    A garden shall arise, in loveliness
    Surpassing fabled Eden.
    Hath Nature's soul,
    That formed this world so beautiful, that spread
    Earth's lap with plenty, and life's smallest chord
    Strung to unchanging unison, that gave
    The happy birds their dwelling in the grove,
    That yielded to the wanderers of the deep
    The lovely silence of the unfathomed main,
    And filled the meanest worm that crawls in dust
    With spirit, thought, and love; on Man alone,
    Partial in causeless malice, wantonly
    Heaped ruin, vice, and slavery; his soul
    Blasted with withering curses; placed afar
    The meteor-happiness, that shuns his grasp,
    But serving on the frightful gulf to glare,
    Rent wide beneath his footsteps?
    Nature! - no!
    Kings, priests, and statesmen, blast the human flower
    Even in its tender bud; their influence darts
    Like subtle poison through the bloodless veins
    Of desolate society. The child,
    Ere he can lisp his mother's sacred name,
    Swells with the unnatural pride of crime, and lifts
    His baby-sword even in a hero's mood.
    This infant-arm becomes the bloodiest scourge
    Of devastated earth; whilst specious names,
    Learned in soft childhood's unsuspecting hour,
    Serve as the sophisms with which manhood dims
    Bright Reason's ray, and sanctifies the sword
    Upraised to shed a brother's innocent blood.
    Let priest-led slaves cease to proclaim that man
    Inherits vice and misery, when Force
    And Falsehood hang even o'er the cradled babe
    Stifling with rudest grasp all natural good.
    'Ah! to the stranger-soul, when first it peeps
    From its new tenement, and looks abroad
    For happiness and sympathy, how stern
    And desolate a tract is this wide world!
    How withered all the buds of natural good!
    No shade, no shelter from the sweeping storms
    Of pitiless power! On its wretched frame,
    Poisoned, perchance, by the disease and woe
    Heaped on the wretched parent whence it sprung
    By morals, law, and custom, the pure winds
    Of Heaven, that renovate the insect tribes,
    May breathe not. The untainting light of day
    May visit not its longings. It is bound
    Ere it has life: yea, all the chains are forged
    Long ere its being: all liberty and love
    And peace is torn from its defencelessness;
    Cursed from its birth, even from its cradle doomed
    To abjectness and bondage!

    'Throughout this varied and eternal world
    Soul is the only element: the block
    That for uncounted ages has remained
    The moveless pillar of a mountain's weight
    Is active, living spirit. Every grain
    Is sentient both in unity and part,
    And the minutest atom comprehends
    A world of loves and hatreds; these beget
    Evil and good: hence truth and falsehood spring;
    Hence will and thought and action, all the germs
    Of pain or pleasure, sympathy or hate,
    That variegate the eternal universe.
    Soul is not more polluted than the beams
    Of Heaven's pure orb, ere round their rapid lines
    The taint of earth-born atmospheres arise.

    'Man is of soul and body, formed for deeds
    Of high resolve, on fancy's boldest wing
    To soar unwearied, fearlessly to turn
    The keenest pangs to peacefulness, and taste
    The joys which mingled sense and spirit yield.
    Or he is formed for abjectness and woe,
    To grovel on the dunghill of his fears,
    To shrink at every sound, to quench the flame
    Of natural love in sensualism, to know
    That hour as blessed when on his worthless days
    The frozen hand of Death shall set its seal,
    Yet fear the cure, though hating the disease.
    The one is man that shall hereafter be;
    The other, man as vice has made him now.

    'War is the statesman's game, the priest's delight,
    The lawyer's jest, the hired assassin's trade,
    And, to those royal murderers, whose mean thrones
    Are bought by crimes of treachery and gore,
    The bread they eat, the staff on which they lean.
    Guards, garbed in blood-red livery, surround
    Their palaces, participate the crimes
    That force defends, and from a nation's rage
    Secure the crown, which all the curses reach
    That famine, frenzy, woe and penury breathe.
    These are the hired bravos who defend
    The tyrant's throne - the bullies of his fear:
    These are the sinks and channels of worst vice,
    The refuse of society, the dregs
    Of all that is most vile: their cold hearts blend
    Deceit with sternness, ignorance with pride,
    All that is mean and villanous, with rage
    Which hopelessness of good, and self-contempt,
    Alone might kindle; they are decked in wealth,
    Honour and power, then are sent abroad
    To do their work. The pestilence that stalks
    In gloomy triumph through some eastern land
    Is less destroying. They cajole with gold,
    And promises of fame, the thoughtless youth
    Already crushed with servitude: he knows
    His wretchedness too late, and cherishes
    Repentance for his ruin, when his doom
    Is sealed in gold and blood!
    Those too the tyrant serve, who, skilled to snare
    The feet of Justice in the toils of law,
    Stand, ready to oppress the weaker still;
    And right or wrong will vindicate for gold,
    Sneering at public virtue, which beneath
    Their pitiless tread lies torn and trampled, where
    Honour sits smiling at the sale of truth.

    'Then grave and hoary-headed hypocrites,
    Without a hope, a passion, or a love,
    Who, through a life of luxury and lies,
    Have crept by flattery to the seats of power,
    Support the system whence their honours flow...
    They have three words: - well tyrants know their use,
    Well pay them for the loan, with usury
    Torn from a bleeding world! - God, Hell, and Heaven.
    A vengeful, pitiless, and almighty fiend,
    Whose mercy is a nickname for the rage
    Of tameless tigers hungering for blood.
    Hell, a red gulf of everlasting fire,
    Where poisonous and undying worms prolong
    Eternal misery to those hapless slaves
    Whose life has been a penance for its crimes.
    And Heaven, a meed for those who dare belie
    Their human nature, quake, believe, and cringe
    Before the mockeries of earthly power.

    'These tools the tyrant tempers to his work,
    Wields in his wrath, and as he wills destroys,
    Omnipotent in wickedness: the while
    Youth springs, age moulders, manhood tamely does
    His bidding, bribed by short-lived joys to lend
    Force to the weakness of his trembling arm.

    'They rise, they fall; one generation comes
    Yielding its harvest to destruction's scythe.
    It fades, another blossoms: yet behold!
    Red glows the tyrant's stamp-mark on its bloom,
    Withering and cankering deep its passive prime.
    He has invented lying words and modes,
    Empty and vain as his own coreless heart;
    Evasive meanings, nothings of much sound,
    To lure the heedless victim to the toils
    Spread round the valley of its paradise.

    'Look to thyself, priest, conqueror, or prince!
    Whether thy trade is falsehood, and thy lusts
    Deep wallow in the earnings of the poor,
    With whom thy Master was: - or thou delight'st
    In numbering o'er the myriads of thy slain,
    All misery weighing nothing in the scale
    Against thy short-lived fame: or thou dost load
    With cowardice and crime the groaning land,
    A pomp-fed king. Look to thy wretched self!
    Ay, art thou not the veriest slave that e'er
    Crawled on the loathing earth? Are not thy days
    Days of unsatisfying listlessness?
    Dost thou not cry, ere night's long rack is o'er,
    "When will the morning come?" Is not thy youth
    A vain and feverish dream of sensualism?
    Thy manhood blighted with unripe disease?
    Are not thy views of unregretted death
    Drear, comfortless, and horrible? Thy mind,
    Is it not morbid as thy nerveless frame,
    Incapable of judgement, hope, or love?
    And dost thou wish the errors to survive
    That bar thee from all sympathies of good,
    After the miserable interest
    Thou hold'st in their protraction? When the grave
    Has swallowed up thy memory and thyself,
    Dost thou desire the bane that poisons earth
    To twine its roots around thy coffined clay,
    Spring from thy bones, and blossom on thy tomb,
    That of its fruit thy babes may eat and die?

    NOTE:
    _176 Secures edition 1813.

    5.

    'Thus do the generations of the earth
    Go to the grave, and issue from the womb,
    Surviving still the imperishable change
    That renovates the world; even as the leaves
    Which the keen frost-wind of the waning year
    Has scattered on the forest soil, and heaped
    For many seasons there - though long they choke,
    Loading with loathsome rottenness the land,
    All germs of promise, yet when the tall trees
    From which they fell, shorn of their lovely shapes,
    Lie level with the earth to moulder there,
    They fertilize the land they long deformed,
    Till from the breathing lawn a forest springs
    Of youth, integrity, and loveliness,
    Like that which gave it life, to spring and die.
    Thus suicidal selfishness, that blights
    The fairest feelings of the opening heart,
    Is destined to decay, whilst from the soil
    Shall spring all virtue, all delight, all love,
    And judgement cease to wage unnatural war
    With passion's unsubduable array.
    Twin-sister of religion, selfishness!
    Rival in crime and falsehood, aping all
    The wanton horrors of her bloody play;
    Yet frozen, unimpassioned, spiritless,
    Shunning the light, and owning not its name,
    Compelled, by its deformity, to screen,
    With flimsy veil of justice and of right,
    Its unattractive lineaments, that scare
    All, save the brood of ignorance: at once
    The cause and the effect of tyranny;
    Unblushing, hardened, sensual, and vile;
    Dead to all love but of its abjectness,
    With heart impassive by more noble powers
    Than unshared pleasure, sordid gain, or fame;
    Despising its own miserable being,
    Which still it longs, yet fears to disenthrall.

    'Hence commerce springs, the venal interchange
    Of all that human art or nature yield;
    Which wealth should purchase not, but want demand,
    And natural kindness hasten to supply
    From the full fountain of its boundless love,
    For ever stifled, drained, and tainted now.
    Commerce! beneath whose poison-breathing shade
    No solitary virtue dares to spring,
    But Poverty and Wealth with equal hand
    Scatter their withering curses, and unfold
    The doors of premature and violent death,
    To pining famine and full-fed disease,
    To all that shares the lot of human life,
    Which poisoned, body and soul, scarce drags the chain,
    That lengthens as it goes and clanks behind.

    'Commerce has set the mark of selfishness,
    The signet of its all-enslaving power
    Upon a shining ore, and called it gold:
    Before whose image bow the vulgar great,
    The vainly rich, the miserable proud,
    The mob of peasants, nobles, priests, and kings,
    And with blind feelings reverence the power
    That grinds them to the dust of misery.
    But in the temple of their hireling hearts
    Gold is a living god, and rules in scorn
    All earthly things but virtue.

    'Since tyrants, by the sale of human life,
    Heap luxuries to their sensualism, and fame
    To their wide-wasting and insatiate pride,
    Success has sanctioned to a credulous world
    The ruin, the disgrace, the woe of war.
    His hosts of blind and unresisting dupes
    The despot numbers; from his cabinet
    These puppets of his schemes he moves at will,
    Even as the slaves by force or famine driven,
    Beneath a vulgar master, to perform
    A task of cold and brutal drudgery; -
    Hardened to hope, insensible to fear,
    Scarce living pulleys of a dead machine,
    Mere wheels of work and articles of trade,
    That grace the proud and noisy pomp of wealth!

    'The harmony and happiness of man
    Yields to the wealth of nations; that which lifts
    His nature to the heaven of its pride,
    Is bartered for the poison of his soul;
    The weight that drags to earth his towering hopes,
    Blighting all prospect but of selfish gain,
    Withering all passion but of slavish fear,
    Extinguishing all free and generous love
    Of enterprise and daring, even the pulse
    That fancy kindles in the beating heart
    To mingle with sensation, it destroys, -
    Leaves nothing but the sordid lust of self,
    The grovelling hope of interest and gold,
    Unqualified, unmingled, unredeemed
    Even by hypocrisy.
    And statesmen boast
    Of wealth! The wordy eloquence, that lives
    After the ruin of their hearts, can gild
    The bitter poison of a nation's woe,
    Can turn the worship of the servile mob
    To their corrupt and glaring idol, Fame,
    From Virtue, trampled by its iron tread,
    Although its dazzling pedestal be raised
    Amid the horrors of a limb-strewn field,
    With desolated dwellings smoking round.
    The man of ease, who, by his warm fireside,
    To deeds of charitable intercourse,
    And bare fulfilment of the common laws
    Of decency and prejudice, confines
    The struggling nature of his human heart,
    Is duped by their cold sophistry; he sheds
    A passing tear perchance upon the wreck
    Of earthly peace, when near his dwelling's door
    The frightful waves are driven, - when his son
    Is murdered by the tyrant, or religion
    Drives his wife raving mad. But the poor man,
    Whose life is misery, and fear, and care;
    Whom the morn wakens but to fruitless toil;
    Who ever hears his famished offspring's scream,
    Whom their pale mother's uncomplaining gaze
    For ever meets, and the proud rich man's eye
    Flashing command, and the heart-breaking scene
    Of thousands like himself; - he little heeds
    The rhetoric of tyranny; his hate
    Is quenchless as his wrongs; he laughs to scorn
    The vain and bitter mockery of words,
    Feeling the horror of the tyrant's deeds,
    And unrestrained but by the arm of power,
    That knows and dreads his enmity.

    'The iron rod of Penury still compels
    Her wretched slave to bow the knee to wealth,
    And poison, with unprofitable toil,
    A life too void of solace to confirm
    The very chains that bind him to his doom.
    Nature, impartial in munificence,
    Has gifted man with all-subduing will.
    Matter, with all its transitory shapes,
    Lies subjected and plastic at his feet,
    That, weak from bondage, tremble as they tread.
    How many a rustic Milton has passed by,
    Stifling the speechless longings of his heart,
    In unremitting drudgery and care!
    How many a vulgar Cato has compelled
    His energies, no longer tameless then,
    To mould a pin, or fabricate a nail!
    How many a Newton, to whose passive ken
    Those mighty spheres that gem infinity
    Were only specks of tinsel, fixed in Heaven
    To light the midnights of his native town!

    'Yet every heart contains perfection's germ:
    The wisest of the sages of the earth,
    That ever from the stores of reason drew
    Science and truth, and virtue's dreadless tone,
    Were but a weak and inexperienced boy,
    Proud, sensual, unimpassioned, unimbued
    With pure desire and universal love,
    Compared to that high being, of cloudless brain,
    Untainted passion, elevated will,
    Which Death (who even would linger long in awe
    Within his noble presence, and beneath
    His changeless eyebeam) might alone subdue.
    Him, every slave now dragging through the filth
    Of some corrupted city his sad life,
    Pining with famine, swoln with luxury,
    Blunting the keenness of his spiritual sense
    With narrow schemings and unworthy cares,
    Or madly rushing through all violent crime,
    To move the deep stagnation of his soul, -
    Might imitate and equal.
    But mean lust
    Has bound its chains so tight around the earth,
    That all within it but the virtuous man
    Is venal: gold or fame will surely reach
    The price prefixed by selfishness, to all
    But him of resolute and unchanging will;
    Whom, nor the plaudits of a servile crowd,
    Nor the vile joys of tainting luxury,
    Can bribe to yield his elevated soul
    To Tyranny or Falsehood, though they wield
    With blood-red hand the sceptre of the world.

    'All things are sold: the very light of Heaven
    Is venal; earth's unsparing gifts of love,
    The smallest and most despicable things
    That lurk in the abysses of the deep,
    All objects of our life, even life itself,
    And the poor pittance which the laws allow
    Of liberty, the fellowship of man,
    Those duties which his heart of human love
    Should urge him to perform instinctively,
    Are bought and sold as in a public mart
    Of undisguising selfishness, that sets
    On each its price, the stamp-mark of her reign.
    Even love is sold; the solace of all woe
    Is turned to deadliest agony, old age
    Shivers in selfish beauty's loathing arms,
    And youth's corrupted impulses prepare
    A life of horror from the blighting bane
    Of commerce; whilst the pestilence that springs
    From unenjoying sensualism, has filled
    All human life with hydra-headed woes.

    'Falsehood demands but gold to pay the pangs
    Of outraged conscience; for the slavish priest
    Sets no great value on his hireling faith:
    A little passing pomp, some servile souls,
    Whom cowardice itself might safely chain,
    Or the spare mite of avarice could bribe
    To deck the triumph of their languid zeal,
    Can make him minister to tyranny.
    More daring crime requires a loftier meed:
    Without a shudder, the slave-soldier lends
    His arm to murderous deeds, and steels his heart,
    When the dread eloquence of dying men,
    Low mingling on the lonely field of fame,
    Assails that nature, whose applause he sells
    For the gross blessings of a patriot mob,
    For the vile gratitude of heartless kings,
    And for a cold world's good word, - viler still!

    'There is a nobler glory, which survives
    Until our being fades, and, solacing
    All human care, accompanies its change;
    Deserts not virtue in the dungeon's gloom,
    And, in the precincts of the palace, guides
    Its footsteps through that labyrinth of crime;
    Imbues his lineaments with dauntlessness,
    Even when, from Power's avenging hand, he takes
    Its sweetest, last and noblest title - death;
    - The consciousness of good, which neither gold,
    Nor sordid fame, nor hope of heavenly bliss
    Can purchase; but a life of resolute good, -
    Unalterable will, quenchless desire
    Of universal happiness, the heart
    That beats with it in unison, the brain,
    Whose ever wakeful wisdom toils to change
    Reason's rich stores for its eternal weal.

    'This commerce of sincerest virtue needs
    No mediative signs of selfishness,
    No jealous intercourse of wretched gain,
    No balancings of prudence, cold and long;
    In just and equal measure all is weighed,
    One scale contains the sum of human weal,
    And one, the good man's heart.
    How vainly seek
    The selfish for that happiness denied
    To aught but virtue! Blind and hardened, they,
    Who hope for peace amid the storms of care,
    Who covet power they know not how to use,
    And sigh for pleasure they refuse to give, -
    Madly they frustrate still their own designs;
    And, where they hope that quiet to enjoy
    Which virtue pictures, bitterness of soul,
    Pining regrets, and vain repentances,
    Disease, disgust, and lassitude, pervade
    Their valueless and miserable lives.

    'But hoary-headed Selfishness has felt
    Its death-blow, and is tottering to the grave:
    A brighter morn awaits the human day,
    When every transfer of earth's natural gifts
    Shall be a commerce of good words and works;
    When poverty and wealth, the thirst of fame,
    The fear of infamy, disease and woe,
    War with its million horrors, and fierce hell
    Shall live but in the memory of Time,
    Who, like a penitent libertine, shall start,
    Look back, and shudder at his younger years.'

    6.

    All touch, all eye, all ear,
    The Spirit felt the Fairy's burning speech.
    O'er the thin texture of its frame,
    The varying periods painted changing glows,
    As on a summer even,
    When soul-enfolding music floats around,
    The stainless mirror of the lake
    Re-images the eastern gloom,
    Mingling convulsively its purple hues
    With sunset's burnished gold.

    Then thus the Spirit spoke:
    'It is a wild and miserable world!
    Thorny, and full of care,
    Which every fiend can make his prey at will.
    O Fairy! in the lapse of years,
    Is there no hope in store?
    Will yon vast suns roll on
    Interminably, still illuming
    The night of so many wretched souls,
    And see no hope for them?
    Will not the universal Spirit e'er
    Revivify this withered limb of Heaven?'

    The Fairy calmly smiled
    In comfort, and a kindling gleam of hope
    Suffused the Spirit's lineaments.
    'Oh! rest thee tranquil; chase those fearful doubts,
    Which ne'er could rack an everlasting soul,
    That sees the chains which bind it to its doom.
    Yes! crime and misery are in yonder earth,
    Falsehood, mistake, and lust;
    But the eternal world
    Contains at once the evil and the cure.
    Some eminent in virtue shall start up,
    Even in perversest time:
    The truths of their pure lips, that never die,
    Shall bind the scorpion falsehood with a wreath
    Of ever-living flame,
    Until the monster sting itself to death.

    'How sweet a scene will earth become!
    Of purest spirits a pure dwelling-place,
    Symphonious with the planetary spheres;
    When man, with changeless Nature coalescing,
    Will undertake regeneration's work,
    When its ungenial poles no longer point
    To the red and baleful sun
    That faintly twinkles there.

    'Spirit! on yonder earth,
    Falsehood now triumphs; deadly power
    Has fixed its seal upon the lip of truth!
    Madness and misery are there!
    The happiest is most wretched! Yet confide,
    Until pure health-drops, from the cup of joy,
    Fall like a dew of balm upon the world.
    Now, to the scene I show, in silence turn,
    And read the blood-stained charter of all woe,
    Which Nature soon, with re-creating hand,
    Will blot in mercy from the book of earth.
    How bold the flight of Passion's wandering wing,
    How swift the step of Reason's firmer tread,
    How calm and sweet the victories of life,
    How terrorless the triumph of the grave!
    How powerless were the mightiest monarch's arm,
    Vain his loud threat, and impotent his frown!
    How ludicrous the priest's dogmatic roar!
    The weight of his exterminating curse
    How light! and his affected charity,
    To suit the pressure of the changing times,
    What palpable deceit! - but for thy aid,
    Religion! but for thee, prolific fiend,
    Who peoplest earth with demons, Hell with men,
    And Heaven with slaves!

    'Thou taintest all thou look'st upon! - the stars,
    Which on thy cradle beamed so brightly sweet,
    Were gods to the distempered playfulness
    Of thy untutored infancy: the trees,
    The grass, the clouds, the mountains, and the sea,
    All living things that walk, swim, creep, or fly,
    Were gods: the sun had homage, and the moon
    Her worshipper. Then thou becam'st, a boy,
    More daring in thy frenzies: every shape,
    Monstrous or vast, or beautifully wild,
    Which, from sensation's relics, fancy culls
    The spirits of the air, the shuddering ghost,
    The genii of the elements, the powers
    That give a shape to Nature's varied works,
    Had life and place in the corrupt belief
    Of thy blind heart: yet still thy youthful hands
    Were pure of human blood. Then manhood gave
    Its strength and ardour to thy frenzied brain;
    Thine eager gaze scanned the stupendous scene,
    Whose wonders mocked the knowledge of thy pride:
    Their everlasting and unchanging laws
    Reproached thine ignorance. Awhile thou stoodst
    Baffled and gloomy; then thou didst sum up
    The elements of all that thou didst know;
    The changing seasons, winter's leafless reign,
    The budding of the Heaven-breathing trees,
    The eternal orbs that beautify the night,
    The sunrise, and the setting of the moon,
    Earthquakes and wars, and poisons and disease,
    And all their causes, to an abstract point
    Converging, thou didst bend and called it God!
    The self-sufficing, the omnipotent,
    The merciful, and the avenging God!
    Who, prototype of human misrule, sits
    High in Heaven's realm, upon a golden throne,
    Even like an earthly king; and whose dread work,
    Hell, gapes for ever for the unhappy slaves
    Of fate, whom He created, in his sport,
    To triumph in their torments when they fell!
    Earth heard the name; Earth trembled, as the smoke
    Of His revenge ascended up to Heaven,
    Blotting the constellations; and the cries
    Of millions, butchered in sweet confidence
    And unsuspecting peace, even when the bonds
    Of safety were confirmed by wordy oaths
    Sworn in His dreadful name, rung through the land;
    Whilst innocent babes writhed on thy stubborn spear,
    And thou didst laugh to hear the mother's shriek
    Of maniac gladness, as the sacred steel
    Felt cold in her torn entrails!

    'Religion! thou wert then in manhood's prime:
    But age crept on: one God would not suffice
    For senile puerility; thou framedst
    A tale to suit thy dotage, and to glut
    Thy misery-thirsting soul, that the mad fiend
    Thy wickedness had pictured might afford
    A plea for sating the unnatural thirst
    For murder, rapine, violence, and crime,
    That still consumed thy being, even when
    Thou heardst the step of Fate; - that flames might light
    Thy funeral scene, and the shrill horrent shrieks
    Of parents dying on the pile that burned
    To light their children to thy paths, the roar
    Of the encircling flames, the exulting cries
    Of thine apostles, loud commingling there,
    Might sate thine hungry ear
    Even on the bed of death!

    'But now contempt is mocking thy gray hairs;
    Thou art descending to the darksome grave,
    Unhonoured and unpitied, but by those
    Whose pride is passing by like thine, and sheds,
    Like thine, a glare that fades before the sun
    Of truth, and shines but in the dreadful night
    That long has lowered above the ruined world.

    'Throughout these infinite orbs of mingling light,
    Of which yon earth is one, is wide diffused
    A Spirit of activity and life,
    That knows no term, cessation, or decay;
    That fades not when the lamp of earthly life,
    Extinguished in the dampness of the grave,
    Awhile there slumbers, more than when the babe
    In the dim newness of its being feels
    The impulses of sublunary things,
    And all is wonder to unpractised sense:
    But, active, steadfast, and eternal, still
    Guides the fierce whirlwind, in the tempest roars,
    Cheers in the day, breathes in the balmy groves,
    Strengthens in health, and poisons in disease;
    And in the storm of change, that ceaselessly
    Rolls round the eternal universe, and shakes
    Its undecaying battlement, presides,
    Apportioning with irresistible law
    The place each spring of its machine shall fill;
    So that when waves on waves tumultuous heap
    Confusion to the clouds, and fiercely driven
    Heaven's lightnings scorch the uprooted ocean-fords,
    Whilst, to the eye of shipwrecked mariner,
    Lone sitting on the bare and shuddering rock,
    All seems unlinked contingency and chance:
    No atom of this turbulence fulfils
    A vague and unnecessitated task,
    Or acts but as it must and ought to act.
    Even the minutest molecule of light,
    That in an April sunbeam's fleeting glow
    Fulfils its destined, though invisible work,
    The universal Spirit guides; nor less,
    When merciless ambition, or mad zeal,
    Has led two hosts of dupes to battlefield,
    That, blind, they there may dig each other's graves,
    And call the sad work glory, does it rule
    All passions: not a thought, a will, an act,
    No working of the tyrant's moody mind,
    Nor one misgiving of the slaves who boast
    Their servitude, to hide the shame they feel,
    Nor the events enchaining every will,
    That from the depths of unrecorded time
    Have drawn all-influencing virtue, pass
    Unrecognized, or unforeseen by thee,
    Soul of the Universe! eternal spring
    Of life and death, of happiness and woe,
    Of all that chequers the phantasmal scene
    That floats before our eyes in wavering light,
    Which gleams but on the darkness of our prison,
    Whose chains and massy walls
    We feel, but cannot see.

    'Spirit of Nature! all-sufficing Power,
    Necessity! thou mother of the world!
    Unlike the God of human error, thou
    Requir'st no prayers or praises; the caprice
    Of man's weak will belongs no more to thee
    Than do the changeful passions of his breast
    To thy unvarying harmony: the slave,
    Whose horrible lusts spread misery o'er the world,
    And the good man, who lifts, with virtuous pride,
    His being, in the sight of happiness,
    That springs from his own works; the poison-tree
    Beneath whose shade all life is withered up,
    And the fair oak, whose leafy dome affords
    A temple where the vows of happy love
    Are registered, are equal in thy sight:
    No love, no hate thou cherishest; revenge
    And favouritism, and worst desire of fame
    Thou know'st not: all that the wide world contains
    Are but thy passive instruments, and thou
    Regard'st them all with an impartial eye,
    Whose joy or pain thy nature cannot feel,
    Because thou hast not human sense,
    Because thou art not human mind.

    'Yes! when the sweeping storm of time
    Has sung its death-dirge o'er the ruined fanes
    And broken altars of the almighty Fiend
    Whose name usurps thy honours, and the blood
    Through centuries clotted there, has floated down
    The tainted flood of ages, shalt thou live
    Unchangeable! A shrine is raised to thee,
    Which, nor the tempest-breath of time,
    Nor the interminable flood,
    Over earth's slight pageant rolling,
    Availeth to destroy, - .
    The sensitive extension of the world.
    That wondrous and eternal fane,
    Where pain and pleasure, good and evil join,
    To do the will of strong necessity,
    And life, in multitudinous shapes,
    Still pressing forward where no term can be,
    Like hungry and unresting flame
    Curls round the eternal columns of its strength.'

    7.

    SPIRIT:
    'I was an infant when my mother went
    To see an atheist burned. She took me there:
    The dark-robed priests were met around the pile;
    The multitude was gazing silently;
    And as the culprit passed with dauntless mien,
    Tempered disdain in his unaltering eye,
    Mixed with a quiet smile, shone calmly forth:
    The thirsty fire crept round his manly limbs;
    His resolute eyes were scorched to blindness soon;
    His death-pang rent my heart! the insensate mob
    Uttered a cry of triumph, and I wept.
    "Weep not, child!" cried my mother, "for that man
    Has said, There is no God."'

    FAIRY:
    'There is no God!
    Nature confirms the faith his death-groan sealed:
    Let heaven and earth, let man's revolving race,
    His ceaseless generations tell their tale;
    Let every part depending on the chain
    That links it to the whole, point to the hand
    That grasps its term! let every seed that falls
    In silent eloquence unfold its store
    Of argument; infinity within,
    Infinity without, belie creation;
    The exterminable spirit it contains
    Is nature's only God; but human pride
    Is skilful to invent most serious names
    To hide its ignorance.
    The name of God
    Has fenced about all crime with holiness,
    Himself the creature of His worshippers,
    Whose names and attributes and passions change,
    Seeva, Buddh, Foh, Jehovah, God, or Lord,
    Even with the human dupes who build His shrines,
    Still serving o'er the war-polluted world
    For desolation's watchword; whether hosts
    Stain His death-blushing chariot-wheels, as on
    Triumphantly they roll, whilst Brahmins raise
    A sacred hymn to mingle with the groans;
    Or countless partners of His power divide
    His tyranny to weakness; or the smoke
    Of burning towns, the cries of female helplessness,
    Unarmed old age, and youth, and infancy,
    Horribly massacred, ascend to Heaven
    In honour of His name; or, last and worst,
    Earth groans beneath religion's iron age,
    And priests dare babble of a God of peace,
    Even whilst their hands are red with guiltless blood,
    Murdering the while, uprooting every germ
    Of truth, exterminating, spoiling all,
    Making the earth a slaughter-house!

    'O Spirit! through the sense
    By which thy inner nature was apprised
    Of outward shows, vague dreams have rolled,
    And varied reminiscences have waked
    Tablets that never fade;
    All things have been imprinted there,
    The stars, the sea, the earth, the sky,
    Even the unshapeliest lineaments
    Of wild and fleeting visions
    Have left a record there
    To testify of earth.

    'These are my empire, for to me is given
    The wonders of the human world to keep,
    And Fancy's thin creations to endow
    With manner, being, and reality;
    Therefore a wondrous phantom, from the dreams
    Of human error's dense and purblind faith,
    I will evoke, to meet thy questioning.
    Ahasuerus, rise!'

    A strange and woe-worn wight
    Arose beside the battlement,
    And stood unmoving there.
    His inessential figure cast no shade
    Upon the golden floor;
    His port and mien bore mark of many years,
    And chronicles of untold ancientness
    Were legible within his beamless eye:
    Yet his cheek bore the mark of youth;
    Freshness and vigour knit his manly frame;
    The wisdom of old age was mingled there
    With youth's primaeval dauntlessness;
    And inexpressible woe,
    Chastened by fearless resignation, gave
    An awful grace to his all-speaking brow.

    SPIRIT:
    'Is there a God?'

    AHASUERUS:
    'Is there a God! - ay, an almighty God,
    And vengeful as almighty! Once His voice
    Was heard on earth: earth shuddered at the sound;
    The fiery-visaged firmament expressed
    Abhorrence, and the grave of Nature yawned
    To swallow all the dauntless and the good
    That dared to hurl defiance at His throne,
    Girt as it was with power. None but slaves
    Survived, - cold-blooded slaves, who did the work
    Of tyrannous omnipotence; whose souls
    No honest indignation ever urged
    To elevated daring, to one deed
    Which gross and sensual self did not pollute.
    These slaves built temples for the omnipotent Fiend,
    Gorgeous and vast: the costly altars smoked
    With human blood, and hideous paeans rung
    Through all the long-drawn aisles. A murderer heard
    His voice in Egypt, one whose gifts and arts
    Had raised him to his eminence in power,
    Accomplice of omnipotence in crime,
    And confidant of the all-knowing one.
    These were Jehovah's words: -

    'From an eternity of idleness
    I, God, awoke; in seven days' toil made earth
    From nothing; rested, and created man:
    I placed him in a Paradise, and there
    Planted the tree of evil, so that he
    Might eat and perish, and My soul procure
    Wherewith to sate its malice, and to turn,
    Even like a heartless conqueror of the earth,
    All misery to My fame. The race of men
    Chosen to My honour, with impunity
    May sate the lusts I planted in their heart.
    Here I command thee hence to lead them on,
    Until, with hardened feet, their conquering troops
    Wade on the promised soil through woman's blood,
    And make My name be dreaded through the land.
    Yet ever-burning flame and ceaseless woe
    Shall be the doom of their eternal souls,
    With every soul on this ungrateful earth,
    Virtuous or vicious, weak or strong, - even all
    Shall perish, to fulfil the blind revenge
    (Which you, to men, call justice) of their God.'

    The murderer's brow
    Quivered with horror.
    'God omnipotent,
    Is there no mercy? must our punishment
    Be endless? will long ages roll away,
    And see no term? Oh! wherefore hast Thou made
    In mockery and wrath this evil earth?
    Mercy becomes the powerful - be but just:
    O God! repent and save.'

    'One way remains:
    I will beget a Son, and He shall bear
    The sins of all the world; He shall arise
    In an unnoticed corner of the earth,
    And there shall die upon a cross, and purge
    The universal crime; so that the few
    On whom My grace descends, those who are marked
    As vessels to the honour of their God,
    May credit this strange sacrifice, and save
    Their souls alive: millions shall live and die,
    Who ne'er shall call upon their Saviour's name,
    But, unredeemed, go to the gaping grave.
    Thousands shall deem it an old woman's tale,
    Such as the nurses frighten babes withal:
    These in a gulf of anguish and of flame
    Shall curse their reprobation endlessly,
    Yet tenfold pangs shall force them to avow,
    Even on their beds of torment, where they howl,
    My honour, and the justice of their doom.
    What then avail their virtuous deeds, their thoughts
    Of purity, with radiant genius bright,
    Or lit with human reason's earthly ray?
    Many are called, but few will I elect.
    Do thou My bidding, Moses!'
    Even the murderer's cheek
    Was blanched with horror, and his quivering lips
    Scarce faintly uttered - 'O almighty One,
    I tremble and obey!'

    'O Spirit! centuries have set their seal
    On this heart of many wounds, and loaded brain,
    Since the Incarnate came: humbly He came,
    Veiling His horrible Godhead in the shape
    Of man, scorned by the world, His name unheard,
    Save by the rabble of His native town,
    Even as a parish demagogue. He led
    The crowd; He taught them justice, truth, and peace,
    In semblance; but He lit within their souls
    The quenchless flames of zeal, and blessed the sword
    He brought on earth to satiate with the blood
    Of truth and freedom His malignant soul.
    At length His mortal frame was led to death.
    I stood beside Him: on the torturing cross
    No pain assailed His unterrestrial sense;
    And yet He groaned. Indignantly I summed
    The massacres and miseries which His name
    Had sanctioned in my country, and I cried,
    "Go! Go!" in mockery.
    A smile of godlike malice reillumed
    His fading lineaments. - "I go," He cried,
    "But thou shalt wander o'er the unquiet earth
    Eternally." - The dampness of the grave
    Bathed my imperishable front. I fell,
    And long lay tranced upon the charmed soil.
    When I awoke Hell burned within my brain,
    Which staggered on its seat; for all around
    The mouldering relics of my kindred lay,
    Even as the Almighty's ire arrested them,
    And in their various attitudes of death
    My murdered children's mute and eyeless skulls
    Glared ghastily upon me.
    But my soul,
    From sight and sense of the polluting woe
    Of tyranny, had long learned to prefer
    Hell's freedom to the servitude of Heaven.
    Therefore I rose, and dauntlessly began
    My lonely and unending pilgrimage,
    Resolved to wage unweariable war
    With my almighty Tyrant, and to hurl
    Defiance at His impotence to harm
    Beyond the curse I bore. The very hand
    That barred my passage to the peaceful grave
    Has crushed the earth to misery, and given
    Its empire to the chosen of His slaves.
    These have I seen, even from the earliest dawn
    Of weak, unstable and precarious power,
    Then preaching peace, as now they practise war;
    So, when they turned but from the massacre
    Of unoffending infidels, to quench
    Their thirst for ruin in the very blood
    That flowed in their own veins, and pitiless zeal
    Froze every human feeling, as the wife
    Sheathed in her husband's heart the sacred steel,
    Even whilst its hopes were dreaming of her love;
    And friends to friends, brothers to brothers stood
    Opposed in bloodiest battle-field, and war,
    Scarce satiable by fate's last death-draught, waged,
    Drunk from the winepress of the Almighty's wrath;
    Whilst the red cross, in mockery of peace,
    Pointed to victory! When the fray was done,
    No remnant of the exterminated faith
    Survived to tell its ruin, but the flesh,
    With putrid smoke poisoning the atmosphere,
    That rotted on the half-extinguished pile.

    'Yes! I have seen God's worshippers unsheathe
    The sword of His revenge, when grace descended,
    Confirming all unnatural impulses,
    To sanctify their desolating deeds;
    And frantic priests waved the ill-omened cross
    O'er the unhappy earth: then shone the sun
    On showers of gore from the upflashing steel
    Of safe assassination, and all crime
    Made stingless by the Spirits of the Lord,
    And blood-red rainbows canopied the land.
    'Spirit, no year of my eventful being
    Has passed unstained by crime and misery,
    Which flows from God's own faith. I've marked His slaves
    With tongues whose lies are venomous, beguile
    The insensate mob, and, whilst one hand was red
    With murder, feign to stretch the other out
    For brotherhood and peace; and that they now
    Babble of love and mercy, whilst their deeds
    Are marked with all the narrowness and crime
    That Freedom's young arm dare not yet chastise,
    Reason may claim our gratitude, who now
    Establishing the imperishable throne
    Of truth, and stubborn virtue, maketh vain
    The unprevailing malice of my Foe,
    Whose bootless rage heaps torments for the brave,
    Adds impotent eternities to pain,
    Whilst keenest disappointment racks His breast
    To see the smiles of peace around them play,
    To frustrate or to sanctify their doom.

    'Thus have I stood, - through a wild waste of years
    Struggling with whirlwinds of mad agony,
    Yet peaceful, and serene, and self-enshrined,
    Mocking my powerless Tyrant's horrible curse
    With stubborn and unalterable will,
    Even as a giant oak, which Heaven's fierce flame
    Had scathed in the wilderness, to stand
    A monument of fadeless ruin there;
    Yet peacefully and movelessly it braves
    The midnight conflict of the wintry storm,
    As in the sunlight's calm it spreads
    Its worn and withered arms on high
    To meet the quiet of a summer's noon.'

    The Fairy waved her wand:
    Ahasuerus fled
    Fast as the shapes of mingled shade and mist,
    That lurk in the glens of a twilight grove,
    Flee from the morning beam:
    The matter of which dreams are made
    Not more endowed with actual life
    Than this phantasmal portraiture
    Of wandering human thought.

    NOTE:
    _180 reillumined edition 1813.

    8.

    THE FAIRY:
    'The Present and the Past thou hast beheld:
    It was a desolate sight. Now, Spirit, learn
    The secrets of the Future. - Time!
    Unfold the brooding pinion of thy gloom,
    Render thou up thy half-devoured babes,
    And from the cradles of eternity,
    Where millions lie lulled to their portioned sleep
    By the deep murmuring stream of passing things,
    Tear thou that gloomy shroud. - Spirit, behold
    Thy glorious destiny!'

    Joy to the Spirit came.
    Through the wide rent in Time's eternal veil,
    Hope was seen beaming through the mists of fear:
    Earth was no longer Hell;
    Love, freedom, health, had given
    Their ripeness to the manhood of its prime,
    And all its pulses beat
    Symphonious to the planetary spheres:
    Then dulcet music swelled
    Concordant with the life-strings of the soul;
    It throbbed in sweet and languid beatings there,
    Catching new life from transitory death, -
    Like the vague sighings of a wind at even,
    That wakes the wavelets of the slumbering sea
    And dies on the creation of its breath,
    And sinks and rises, fails and swells by fits:
    Was the pure stream of feeling
    That sprung from these sweet notes,
    And o'er the Spirit's human sympathies
    With mild and gentle motion calmly flowed.

    Joy to the Spirit came, -
    Such joy as when a lover sees
    The chosen of his soul in happiness,
    And witnesses her peace
    Whose woe to him were bitterer than death,
    Sees her unfaded cheek
    Glow mantling in first luxury of health,
    Thrills with her lovely eyes,
    Which like two stars amid the heaving main
    Sparkle through liquid bliss.

    Then in her triumph spoke the Fairy Queen:
    'I will not call the ghost of ages gone
    To unfold the frightful secrets of its lore;
    The present now is past,
    And those events that desolate the earth
    Have faded from the memory of Time,
    Who dares not give reality to that
    Whose being I annul. To me is given
    The wonders of the human world to keep,
    Space, matter, time, and mind. Futurity
    Exposes now its treasure; let the sight
    Renew and strengthen all thy failing hope.
    O human Spirit! spur thee to the goal
    Where virtue fixes universal peace,
    And midst the ebb and flow of human things,
    Show somewhat stable, somewhat certain still,
    A lighthouse o'er the wild of dreary waves.

    'The habitable earth is full of bliss;
    Those wastes of frozen billows that were hurled
    By everlasting snowstorms round the poles,
    Where matter dared not vegetate or live,
    But ceaseless frost round the vast solitude
    Bound its broad zone of stillness, are unloosed;
    And fragrant zephyrs there from spicy isles
    Ruffle the placid ocean-deep, that rolls
    Its broad, bright surges to the sloping sand,
    Whose roar is wakened into echoings sweet
    To murmur through the Heaven-breathing groves
    And melodize with man's blest nature there.

    'Those deserts of immeasurable sand,
    Whose age-collected fervours scarce allowed
    A bird to live, a blade of grass to spring,
    Where the shrill chirp of the green lizard's love
    Broke on the sultry silentness alone,
    Now teem with countless rills and shady woods,
    Cornfields and pastures and white cottages;
    And where the startled wilderness beheld
    A savage conqueror stained in kindred blood,
    A tigress sating with the flesh of lambs
    The unnatural famine of her toothless cubs,
    Whilst shouts and howlings through the desert rang,
    Sloping and smooth the daisy-spangled lawn,
    Offering sweet incense to the sunrise, smiles
    To see a babe before his mother's door,
    Sharing his morning's meal
    With the green and golden basilisk
    That comes to lick his feet.

    'Those trackless deeps, where many a weary sail
    Has seen above the illimitable plain,
    Morning on night, and night on morning rise,
    Whilst still no land to greet the wanderer spread
    Its shadowy mountains on the sun-bright sea,
    Where the loud roarings of the tempest-waves
    So long have mingled with the gusty wind
    In melancholy loneliness, and swept
    The desert of those ocean solitudes,
    But vocal to the sea-bird's harrowing shriek,
    The bellowing monster, and the rushing storm,
    Now to the sweet and many-mingling sounds
    Of kindliest human impulses respond.
    Those lonely realms bright garden-isles begem,
    With lightsome clouds and shining seas between,
    And fertile valleys, resonant with bliss,
    Whilst green woods overcanopy the wave,
    Which like a toil-worn labourer leaps to shore,
    To meet the kisses of the flow'rets there.

    'All things are recreated, and the flame
    Of consentaneous love inspires all life:
    The fertile bosom of the earth gives suck
    To myriads, who still grow beneath her care,
    Rewarding her with their pure perfectness:
    The balmy breathings of the wind inhale
    Her virtues, and diffuse them all abroad:
    Health floats amid the gentle atmosphere,
    Glows in the fruits, and mantles on the stream:
    No storms deform the beaming brow of Heaven,
    Nor scatter in the freshness of its pride
    The foliage of the ever-verdant trees;
    But fruits are ever ripe, flowers ever fair,
    And Autumn proudly bears her matron grace,
    Kindling a flush on the fair cheek of Spring,
    Whose virgin bloom beneath the ruddy fruit
    Reflects its tint, and blushes into love.

    'The lion now forgets to thirst for blood:
    There might you see him sporting in the sun
    Beside the dreadless kid; his claws are sheathed,
    His teeth are harmless, custom's force has made
    His nature as the nature of a lamb.
    Like passion's fruit, the nightshade's tempting bane
    Poisons no more the pleasure it bestows:
    All bitterness is past; the cup of joy
    Unmingled mantles to the goblet's brim,
    And courts the thirsty lips it fled before.

    'But chief, ambiguous Man, he that can know
    More misery, and dream more joy than all;
    Whose keen sensations thrill within his breast
    To mingle with a loftier instinct there,
    Lending their power to pleasure and to pain,
    Yet raising, sharpening, and refining each;
    Who stands amid the ever-varying world,
    The burthen or the glory of the earth;
    He chief perceives the change, his being notes
    The gradual renovation, and defines
    Each movement of its progress on his mind.

    'Man, where the gloom of the long polar night
    Lowers o'er the snow-clad rocks and frozen soil,
    Where scarce the hardiest herb that braves the frost
    Basks in the moonlight's ineffectual glow,
    Shrank with the plants, and darkened with the night;
    His chilled and narrow energies, his heart,
    Insensible to courage, truth, or love,
    His stunted stature and imbecile frame,
    Marked him for some abortion of the earth,
    Fit compeer of the bears that roamed around,
    Whose habits and enjoyments were his own:
    His life a feverish dream of stagnant woe,
    Whose meagre wants, but scantily fulfilled,
    Apprised him ever of the joyless length
    Which his short being's wretchedness had reached;
    His death a pang which famine, cold and toil
    Long on the mind, whilst yet the vital spark
    Clung to the body stubbornly, had brought:
    All was inflicted here that Earth's revenge
    Could wreak on the infringers of her law;
    One curse alone was spared - the name of God.

    'Nor where the tropics bound the realms of day
    With a broad belt of mingling cloud and flame,
    Where blue mists through the unmoving atmosphere
    Scattered the seeds of pestilence, and fed
    Unnatural vegetation, where the land
    Teemed with all earthquake, tempest and disease,
    Was Man a nobler being; slavery
    Had crushed him to his country's bloodstained dust;
    Or he was bartered for the fame of power,
    Which all internal impulses destroying,
    Makes human will an article of trade;
    Or he was changed with Christians for their gold,
    And dragged to distant isles, where to the sound
    Of the flesh-mangling scourge, he does the work
    Of all-polluting luxury and wealth,
    Which doubly visits on the tyrants' heads
    The long-protracted fulness of their woe;
    Or he was led to legal butchery,
    To turn to worms beneath that burning sun,
    Where kings first leagued against the rights of men,
    And priests first traded with the name of God.

    'Even where the milder zone afforded Man
    A seeming shelter, yet contagion there,
    Blighting his being with unnumbered ills,
    Spread like a quenchless fire; nor truth till late
    Availed to arrest its progress, or create
    That peace which first in bloodless victory waved
    Her snowy standard o'er this favoured clime:
    There man was long the train-bearer of slaves,
    The mimic of surrounding misery,
    The jackal of ambition's lion-rage,
    The bloodhound of religion's hungry zeal.
    'Here now the human being stands adorning
    This loveliest earth with taintless body and mind;
    Blessed from his birth with all bland impulses,
    Which gently in his noble bosom wake
    All kindly passions and all pure desires.
    Him, still from hope to hope the bliss pursuing
    Which from the exhaustless lore of human weal
    Dawns on the virtuous mind, the thoughts that rise
    In time-destroying infiniteness, gift
    With self-enshrined eternity, that mocks
    The unprevailing hoariness of age,
    And man, once fleeting o'er the transient scene
    Swift as an unremembered vision, stands
    Immortal upon earth: no longer now
    He slays the lamb that looks him in the face,
    And horribly devours his mangled flesh,
    Which, still avenging Nature's broken law,
    Kindled all putrid humours in his frame,
    All evil passions, and all vain belief,
    Hatred, despair, and loathing in his mind,
    The germs of misery, death, disease, and crime.
    No longer now the winged habitants,
    That in the woods their sweet lives sing away, -
    Flee from the form of man; but gather round,
    And prune their sunny feathers on the hands
    Which little children stretch in friendly sport
    Towards these dreadless partners of their play.
    All things are void of terror: Man has lost
    His terrible prerogative, and stands
    An equal amidst equals: happiness
    And science dawn though late upon the earth;
    Peace cheers the mind, health renovates the frame;
    Disease and pleasure cease to mingle here,
    Reason and passion cease to combat there;
    Whilst each unfettered o'er the earth extend
    Their all-subduing energies, and wield
    The sceptre of a vast dominion there;
    Whilst every shape and mode of matter lends
    Its force to the omnipotence of mind,
    Which from its dark mine drags the gem of truth
    To decorate its Paradise of peace.'

    NOTES:
    _204 exhaustless store edition 1813.
    _205 Draws edition 1813. See Editor's Note.

    9.

    'O happy Earth! reality of Heaven!
    To which those restless souls that ceaselessly
    Throng through the human universe, aspire;
    Thou consummation of all mortal hope!
    Thou glorious prize of blindly-working will!
    Whose rays, diffused throughout all space and time,
    Verge to one point and blend for ever there:
    Of purest spirits thou pure dwelling-place!
    Where care and sorrow, impotence and crime,
    Languor, disease, and ignorance dare not come:
    O happy Earth, reality of Heaven!

    'Genius has seen thee in her passionate dreams,
    And dim forebodings of thy loveliness
    Haunting the human heart, have there entwined
    Those rooted hopes of some sweet place of bliss
    Where friends and lovers meet to part no more.
    Thou art the end of all desire and will,
    The product of all action; and the souls
    That by the paths of an aspiring change
    Have reached thy haven of perpetual peace,
    There rest from the eternity of toil
    That framed the fabric of thy perfectness.

    'Even Time, the conqueror, fled thee in his fear;
    That hoary giant, who, in lonely pride,
    So long had ruled the world, that nations fell
    Beneath his silent footstep. Pyramids,
    That for millenniums had withstood the tide
    Of human things, his storm-breath drove in sand
    Across that desert where their stones survived
    The name of him whose pride had heaped them there.
    Yon monarch, in his solitary pomp,
    Was but the mushroom of a summer day,
    That his light-winged footstep pressed to dust:
    Time was the king of earth: all things gave way
    Before him, but the fixed and virtuous will,
    The sacred sympathies of soul and sense,
    That mocked his fury and prepared his fall.

    'Yet slow and gradual dawned the morn of love;
    Long lay the clouds of darkness o'er the scene,
    Till from its native Heaven they rolled away:
    First, Crime triumphant o'er all hope careered
    Unblushing, undisguising, bold and strong;
    Whilst Falsehood, tricked in Virtue's attributes,
    Long sanctified all deeds of vice and woe,
    Till done by her own venomous sting to death,
    She left the moral world without a law,
    No longer fettering Passion's fearless wing, -
    Nor searing Reason with the brand of God.
    Then steadily the happy ferment worked;
    Reason was free; and wild though Passion went
    Through tangled glens and wood-embosomed meads,
    Gathering a garland of the strangest flowers,
    Yet like the bee returning to her queen,
    She bound the sweetest on her sister's brow,
    Who meek and sober kissed the sportive child,
    No longer trembling at the broken rod.

    'Mild was the slow necessity of death:
    The tranquil spirit failed beneath its grasp,
    Without a groan, almost without a fear,
    Calm as a voyager to some distant land,
    And full of wonder, full of hope as he.
    The deadly germs of languor and disease
    Died in the human frame, and Purity
    Blessed with all gifts her earthly worshippers.
    How vigorous then the athletic form of age!
    How clear its open and unwrinkled brow!
    Where neither avarice, cunning, pride, nor care,
    Had stamped the seal of gray deformity
    On all the mingling lineaments of time.
    How lovely the intrepid front of youth!
    Which meek-eyed courage decked with freshest grace; -
    Courage of soul, that dreaded not a name,
    And elevated will, that journeyed on
    Through life's phantasmal scene in fearlessness,
    With virtue, love, and pleasure, hand in hand.

    'Then, that sweet bondage which is Freedom's self,
    And rivets with sensation's softest tie
    The kindred sympathies of human souls,
    Needed no fetters of tyrannic law:
    Those delicate and timid impulses
    In Nature's primal modesty arose,
    And with undoubted confidence disclosed
    The growing longings of its dawning love,
    Unchecked by dull and selfish chastity,
    That virtue of the cheaply virtuous,
    Who pride themselves in senselessness and frost.
    No longer prostitution's venomed bane
    Poisoned the springs of happiness and life;
    Woman and man, in confidence and love,
    Equal and free and pure together trod
    The mountain-paths of virtue, which no more
    Were stained with blood from many a pilgrim's feet.

    'Then, where, through distant ages, long in pride
    The palace of the monarch-slave had mocked
    Famine's faint groan, and Penury's silent tear,
    A heap of crumbling ruins stood, and threw
    Year after year their stones upon the field,
    Wakening a lonely echo; and the leaves
    Of the old thorn, that on the topmost tower
    Usurped the royal ensign's grandeur, shook
    In the stern storm that swayed the topmost tower
    And whispered strange tales in the Whirlwind's ear.
    'Low through the lone cathedral's roofless aisles
    The melancholy winds a death-dirge sung:
    It were a sight of awfulness to see
    The works of faith and slavery, so vast,
    So sumptuous, yet so perishing withal!
    Even as the corpse that rests beneath its wall.
    A thousand mourners deck the pomp of death
    To-day, the breathing marble glows above
    To decorate its memory, and tongues
    Are busy of its life: to-morrow, worms
    In silence and in darkness seize their prey.

    'Within the massy prison's mouldering courts,
    Fearless and free the ruddy children played,
    Weaving gay chaplets for their innocent brows
    With the green ivy and the red wallflower,
    That mock the dungeon's unavailing gloom;
    The ponderous chains, and gratings of strong iron,
    There rusted amid heaps of broken stone
    That mingled slowly with their native earth:
    There the broad beam of day, which feebly once
    Lighted the cheek of lean Captivity
    With a pale and sickly glare, then freely shone
    On the pure smiles of infant playfulness:
    No more the shuddering voice of hoarse Despair
    Pealed through the echoing vaults, but soothing notes
    Of ivy-fingered winds and gladsome birds
    And merriment were resonant around.

    'These ruins soon left not a wreck behind:
    Their elements, wide scattered o'er the globe,
    To happier shapes were moulded, and became
    Ministrant to all blissful impulses:
    Thus human things were perfected, and earth,
    Even as a child beneath its mother's love,
    Was strengthened in all excellence, and grew
    Fairer and nobler with each passing year.

    'Now Time his dusky pennons o'er the scene
    Closes in steadfast darkness, and the past
    Fades from our charmed sight. My task is done:
    Thy lore is learned. Earth's wonders are thine own,
    With all the fear and all the hope they bring.
    My spells are passed: the present now recurs.
    Ah me! a pathless wilderness remains
    Yet unsubdued by man's reclaiming hand.

    'Yet, human Spirit, bravely hold thy course,
    Let virtue teach thee firmly to pursue
    The gradual paths of an aspiring change:
    For birth and life and death, and that strange state
    Before the naked soul has found its home,
    All tend to perfect happiness, and urge
    The restless wheels of being on their way,
    Whose flashing spokes, instinct with infinite life,
    Bicker and burn to gain their destined goal:
    For birth but wakes the spirit to the sense
    Of outward shows, whose unexperienced shape
    New modes of passion to its frame may lend;
    Life is its state of action, and the store
    Of all events is aggregated there
    That variegate the eternal universe;
    Death is a gate of dreariness and gloom,
    That leads to azure isles and beaming skies
    And happy regions of eternal hope.
    Therefore, O Spirit! fearlessly bear on:
    Though storms may break the primrose on its stalk,
    Though frosts may blight the freshness of its bloom,
    Yet Spring's awakening breath will woo the earth,
    To feed with kindliest dews its favourite flower,
    That blooms in mossy banks and darksome glens,
    Lighting the greenwood with its sunny smile.

    'Fear not then, Spirit, Death's disrobing hand,
    So welcome when the tyrant is awake,
    So welcome when the bigot's hell-torch burns;
    'Tis but the voyage of a darksome hour,
    The transient gulf-dream of a startling sleep.
    Death is no foe to Virtue: earth has seen
    Love's brightest roses on the scaffold bloom,
    Mingling with Freedom's fadeless laurels there,
    And presaging the truth of visioned bliss.
    Are there not hopes within thee, which this scene
    Of linked and gradual being has confirmed?
    Whose stingings bade thy heart look further still,
    When, to the moonlight walk by Henry led,
    Sweetly and sadly thou didst talk of death?
    And wilt thou rudely tear them from thy breast,
    Listening supinely to a bigot's creed,
    Or tamely crouching to the tyrant's rod,
    Whose iron thongs are red with human gore?
    Never: but bravely bearing on, thy will
    Is destined an eternal war to wage
    With tyranny and falsehood, and uproot
    The germs of misery from the human heart.
    Thine is the hand whose piety would soothe
    The thorny pillow of unhappy crime,
    Whose impotence an easy pardon gains,
    Watching its wanderings as a friend's disease:
    Thine is the brow whose mildness would defy
    Its fiercest rage, and brave its sternest will,
    When fenced by power and master of the world.
    Thou art sincere and good; of resolute mind,
    Free from heart-withering custom's cold control,
    Of passion lofty, pure and unsubdued.
    Earth's pride and meanness could not vanquish thee,
    And therefore art thou worthy of the boon
    Which thou hast now received: Virtue shall keep
    Thy footsteps in the path that thou hast trod,
    And many days of beaming hope shall bless
    Thy spotless life of sweet and sacred love.
    Go, happy one, and give that bosom joy
    Whose sleepless spirit waits to catch
    Light, life and rapture from thy smile.'

    The Fairy waves her wand of charm.
    Speechless with bliss the Spirit mounts the car,
    That rolled beside the battlement,
    Bending her beamy eyes in thankful ness.
    Again the enchanted steeds were yoked,
    Again the burning wheels inflame
    The steep descent of Heaven's untrodden way.
    Fast and far the chariot flew:
    The vast and fiery globes that rolled
    Around the Fairy's palace-gate
    Lessened by slow degrees and soon appeared
    Such tiny twinklers as the planet orbs
    That there attendant on the solar power
    With borrowed light pursued their narrower way.

    Earth floated then below:
    The chariot paused a moment there;
    The Spirit then descended:
    The restless coursers pawed the ungenial soil,
    Snuffed the gross air, and then, their errand done,
    Unfurled their pinions to the winds of Heaven.

    The Body and the Soul united then,
    A gentle start convulsed Ianthe's frame:
    Her veiny eyelids quietly unclosed;
    Moveless awhile the dark blue orbs remained:
    She looked around in wonder and beheld
    Henry, who kneeled in silence by her couch,
    Watching her sleep with looks of speechless love,
    And the bright beaming stars
    That through the casement shone.



Extra Info:
NOTES ON QUEEN MAB.


SHELLEY'S NOTES.

1. 242, 243: -

The sun's unclouded orb
Rolled through the black concave.

Beyond our atmosphere the sun would appear a rayless orb of fire in the
midst of a black concave. The equal diffusion of its light on earth is
owing to the refraction of the rays by the atmosphere, and their
reflection from other bodies. Light consists either of vibrations
propagated through a subtle medium, or of numerous minute particles
repelled in all directions from the luminous body. Its velocity greatly
exceeds that of any substance with which we are acquainted: observations
on the eclipses of Jupiter's satellites have demonstrated that light
takes up no more than 8 minutes 7 seconds in passing from the sun to the
earth, a distance of 95,000,000 miles. - Some idea may be gained of the
immense distance of the fixed stars when it is computed that many years
would elapse before light could reach this earth from the nearest of
them; yet in one year light travels 5,422,400,000,000 miles, which is a
distance 5,707,600 times greater than that of the sun from the earth.

1. 252, 253: -

Whilst round the chariot's way
Innumerable systems rolled.

The plurality of worlds, - the indefinite immensity of the universe, is a
most awful subject of contemplation. He who rightly feels its mystery
and grandeur is in no danger of seduction from the falsehoods of
religious systems, or of deifying the principle of the universe. It is
impossible to believe that the Spirit that pervades this infinite
machine begat a son upon the body of a Jewish woman; or is angered at
the consequences of that necessity, which is a synonym of itself. All
that miserable tale of the Devil, and Eve, and an Intercessor, with the
childish mummeries of the God of the Jews, is irreconcilable with the
knowledge of the stars. The works of His fingers have borne witness
against Him.

The nearest of the fixed stars is inconceivably distant from the earth,
and they are probably proportionably distant from each other. By a
calculation of the velocity of light, Sirius is supposed to be at least
54,224,000,000,000 miles from the earth. (See Nicholson's
"Encyclopedia", article Light.) That which appears only like a thin and
silvery cloud streaking the heaven is in effect composed of innumerable
clusters of suns, each shining with its own light, and illuminating
numbers of planets that revolve around them. Millions and millions of
suns are ranged around us, all attended by innumerable worlds, yet calm,
regular, and harmonious, all keeping the paths of immutable necessity.

4. 178, 179: -

These are the hired bravos who defend
The tyrant's throne.

To employ murder as a means of justice is an idea which a man of an
enlightened mind will not dwell upon with pleasure. To march forth in
rank and file, and all the pomp of streamers and trumpets, for the
purpose of shooting at our fellow-men as a mark; to inflict upon them
all the variety of wound and anguish; to leave them weltering in their
blood; to wander over the field of desolation, and count the number of
the dying and the dead, - are employments which in thesis we may maintain
to be necessary, but which no good man will contemplate with gratulation
and delight. A battle we suppose is won: - thus truth is established,
thus the cause of justice is confirmed! It surely requires no common
sagacity to discern the connexion between this immense heap of
calamities and the assertion of truth or the maintenance of justice.

'Kings, and ministers of state, the real authors of the calamity, sit
unmolested in their cabinet, while those against whom the fury of the
storm is directed are, for the most part, persons who have been
trepanned into the service, or who are dragged unwillingly from their
peaceful homes into the field of battle. A soldier is a man whose
business it is to kill those who never offended him, and who are the
innocent martyrs of other men's iniquities. Whatever may become of the
abstract question of the justifiableness of war, it seems impossible
that the soldier should not be a depraved and unnatural being.

To these more serious and momentous considerations it may be proper to
add a recollection of the ridiculousness of the military character. Its
first constituent is obedience: a soldier is, of all descriptions of
men, the most completely a machine; yet his profession inevitably
teaches him something of dogmatism, swaggering, and sell-consequence: he
is like the puppet of a showman, who, at the very time he is made to
strut and swell and display the most farcical airs, we perfectly know
cannot assume the most insignificant gesture, advance either to the
right or the left, but as he is moved by his exhibitor.' - Godwin's
"Enquirer", Essay 5.

I will here subjoin a little poem, so strongly expressive of my
abhorrence of despotism and falsehood, that I fear lest it never again
may be depictured so vividly. This opportunity is perhaps the only one
that ever will occur of rescuing it from oblivion.

FALSEHOOD AND VICE.

A DIALOGUE.

Whilst monarchs laughed upon their thrones
To hear a famished nation's groans,
And hugged the wealth wrung from the woe
That makes its eyes and veins o'erflow, -
Those thrones, high built upon the heaps
Of bones where frenzied Famine sleeps,
Where Slavery wields her scourge of iron,
Red with mankind's unheeded gore,
And War's mad fiends the scene environ,
Mingling with shrieks a drunken roar,
There Vice and Falsehood took their stand,
High raised above the unhappy land.

FALSEHOOD:
Brother! arise from the dainty fare,
Which thousands have toiled and bled to bestow;
A finer feast for thy hungry ear
Is the news that I bring of human woe.

VICE:
And, secret one, what hast thou done,
To compare, in thy tumid pride, with me?
I, whose career, through the blasted year,
Has been tracked by despair and agony.

FALSEHOOD:
What have I done! - I have torn the robe
From baby Truth's unsheltered form,
And round the desolated globe
Borne safely the bewildering charm:
My tyrant-slaves to a dungeon-floor
Have bound the fearless innocent,
And streams of fertilizing gore
Flow from her bosom's hideous rent,
Which this unfailing dagger gave...
I dread that blood! - no more - this day
Is ours, though her eternal ray
Must shine upon our grave.
Yet know, proud Vice, had I not given
To thee the robe I stole from Heaven,
Thy shape of ugliness and fear
Had never gained admission here.

VICE:
And know, that had I disdained to toil,
But sate in my loathsome cave the while,
And ne'er to these hateful sons of Heaven,
GOLD, MONARCHY, and MURDER, given;
Hadst thou with all thine art essayed
One of thy games then to have played,
With all thine overweening boast,
Falsehood! I tell thee thou hadst lost! -
Yet wherefore this dispute? - we tend,
Fraternal, to one common end;
In this cold grave beneath my feet,
Will our hopes, our fears, and our labours, meet.

FALSEHOOD:
I brought my daughter, RELIGION, on earth:
She smothered Reason's babes in their birth;
But dreaded their mother's eye severe, -
So the crocodile slunk off slily in fear,
And loosed her bloodhounds from the den....
They started from dreams of slaughtered men,
And, by the light of her poison eye,
Did her work o'er the wide earth frightfully:
The dreadful stench of her torches' flare,
Fed with human fat, polluted the air:
The curses, the shrieks, the ceaseless cries
Of the many-mingling miseries,
As on she trod, ascended high
And trumpeted my victory! -
Brother, tell what thou hast done.

VICE:
I have extinguished the noonday sun,
In the carnage-smoke of battles won:
Famine, Murder, Hell and Power
Were glutted in that glorious hour
Which searchless fate had stamped for me
With the seal of her security...
For the bloated wretch on yonder throne
Commanded the bloody fray to rise.
Like me he joyed at the stifled moan
Wrung from a nation's miseries;
While the snakes, whose slime even him DEFILED,
In ecstasies of malice smiled:
They thought 'twas theirs, - but mine the deed!
Theirs is the toil, but mine the meed -
Ten thousand victims madly bleed.
They dream that tyrants goad them there
With poisonous war to taint the air:
These tyrants, on their beds of thorn,
Swell with the thoughts of murderous fame,
And with their gains to lift my name
Restless they plan from night to morn:
I - I do all; without my aid
Thy daughter, that relentless maid,
Could never o'er a death-bed urge
The fury of her venomed scourge.

FALSEHOOD:
Brother, well: - the world is ours;
And whether thou or I have won,
The pestilence expectant lowers
On all beneath yon blasted sun.
Our joys, our toils, our honours meet
In the milk-white and wormy winding-sheet:
A short-lived hope, unceasing care,
Some heartless scraps of godly prayer,
A moody curse, and a frenzied sleep
Ere gapes the grave's unclosing deep,
A tyrant's dream, a coward's start,
The ice that clings to a priestly heart,
A judge's frown, a courtier's smile,
Make the great whole for which we toil;
And, brother, whether thou or I
Have done the work of misery,
It little boots: thy toil and pain,
Without my aid, were more than vain;
And but for thee I ne'er had sate
The guardian of Heaven's palace gate.

5. 1, 2: -

Thus do the generations of the earth
Go to the grave, and issue from the womb.

'One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh; but the
earth abideth for ever. The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down,
and hasteth to his place where he arose. The wind goeth toward the
south, and turneth about unto the north; it whirleth about continually,
and the wind returneth again according to his circuits. All the rivers
run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence
the rivers come, thither they return again.' - Ecclesiastes, chapter 1
verses 4-7.

5. 4-6.

Even as the leaves
Which the keen frost-wind of the waning year
Has scattered on the forest soil.

Oin per phullon genee, toiede kai andron.
Phulla ta men t' anemos chamadis cheei, alla de th' ule
Telethoosa phuei, earos d' epigignetai ore.
Os andron genee, e men phuei, e d' apolegei.

Iliad Z, line 146.

5. 58: -
The mob of peasants, nobles, priests, and kings.

Suave mari magno turbantibus aequora ventis
E terra magnum alterius spectare laborem;
Non quia vexari quemquam est iucunda voluptas,
Sed quibus ipse malis careas quia cernere suave est.
Suave etiam belli certamina magna tueri
Per campos instructa, tua sine parte pericli;
Sed nil dulcius est bene quam munita tenere
Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena,
Despicere undo queas alios, passimque videre
Errare atque viam palantis quaerere vitae;
Certare ingenio; contendere nobilitate;
Noctes atque dies niti praestante labore
Ad summas emergere opes, rerumque potiri.
O miseras hominum mentes! O pectora caeca!

Lucret. lib. 2.

5. 93, 94.

And statesmen boast
Of wealth!

There is no real wealth but the labour of man. Were the mountains of
gold and the valleys of silver, the world would not be one grain of corn
the richer; no one comfort would be added to the human race. In
consequence of our consideration for the precious metals, one man is
enabled to heap to himself luxuries at the expense of the necessaries of
his neighbour; a system admirably fitted to produce all the varieties of
disease and crime, which never fail to characterize the two extremes of
opulence and penury. A speculator takes pride to himself as the promoter
of his country's prosperity, who employs a number of hands in the
manufacture of articles avowedly destitute of use, or subservient only
to the unhallowed cravings of luxury and ostentation. The nobleman, who
employs the peasants of his neighbourhood in building his palaces, until
'jam pauca aratro jugera regiae moles relinquunt,' flatters himself that
he has gained the title of a patriot by yielding to the impulses of
vanity. The show and pomp of courts adduce the same apology for its
continuance; and many a fete has been given, many a woman has eclipsed
her beauty by her dress, to benefit the labouring poor and to encourage
trade. Who does not see that this is a remedy which aggravates whilst it
palliates the countless diseases of society? The poor are set to
labour, - for what? Not the food for which they famish: not the blankets
for want of which their babes are frozen by the cold of their miserable
hovels: not those comforts of civilization without which civilized man
is far more miserable than the meanest savage; oppressed as he is by all
its insidious evils, within the daily and taunting prospect of its
innumerable benefits assiduously exhibited before him: - no; for the
pride of power, for the miserable isolation of pride, for the false
pleasures of the hundredth part of society. No greater evidence is
afforded of the wide extended and radical mistakes of civilized man than
this fact: those arts which are essential to his very being are held in
the greatest contempt; employments are lucrative in an inverse ratio to
their usefulness (See Rousseau, "De l'Inegalite parmi les Hommes", note
7.): the jeweller, the toyman, the actor gains fame and wealth by the
exercise of his useless and ridiculous art; whilst the cultivator of the
earth, he without whom society must cease to subsist, struggles through
contempt and penury, and perishes by that famine which but for his
unceasing exertions would annihilate the rest of mankind.

I will not insult common sense by insisting on the doctrine of the
natural equality of man. The question is not concerning its
desirableness, but its practicability: so far as it is practicable, it
is desirable. That state of human society which approaches nearer to an
equal partition of its benefits and evils should, caeteris paribus, be
preferred: but so long as we conceive that a wanton expenditure of human
labour, not for the necessities, not even for the luxuries of the mass
of society, but for the egotism and ostentation of a few of its members,
is defensible on the ground of public justice, so long we neglect to
approximate to the redemption of the human race.

Labour is required for physical, and leisure for moral improvement: from
the former of these advantages the rich, and from the latter the poor,
by the inevitable conditions of their respective situations, are
precluded. A state which should combine the advantages of both would be
subjected to the evils of neither. He that is deficient in firm health,
or vigorous intellect, is but half a man: hence it follows that to
subject the labouring classes to unnecessary labour is wantonly
depriving them of any opportunities of intellectual improvement; and
that the rich are heaping up for their own mischief the disease,
lassitude, and ennui by which their existence is rendered an intolerable
burthen.

English reformers exclaim against sinecures, - but the true pension list
is the rent-roll of the landed proprietors: wealth is a power usurped by
the few, to compel the many to labour for their benefit. The laws which
support this system derive their force from the ignorance and credulity
of its victims: they are the result of a conspiracy of the few against
the many, who are themselves obliged to purchase this pre-eminence by
the loss of all real comfort.

'The commodities that substantially contribute to the subsistence of the
human species form a very short catalogue: they demand from us but a
slender portion of industry. If these only were produced, and
sufficiently produced, the species of man would be continued. If the
labour necessarily required to produce them were equitably divided among
the poor, and, still more, if it were equitably divided among all, each
man's share of labour would be light, and his portion of leisure would
be ample. There was a time when this leisure would have been of small
comparative value: it is to be hoped that the time will come when it
will be applied to the most important purposes. Those hours which are
not required for the production of the necessaries of life may be
devoted to the cultivation of the understanding, the enlarging our stock
of knowledge, the refining our taste, and thus opening to us new and
more exquisite sources of enjoyment.

...

'It was perhaps necessary that a period of monopoly and oppression
should subsist, before a period of cultivated equality could subsist.
Savages perhaps would never have been excited to the discovery of truth
and the invention of art but by the narrow motives which such a period
affords. But surely, after the savage state has ceased, and men have set
out in the glorious career of discovery and invention, monopoly and
oppression cannot be necessary to prevent them from returning to a state
of barbarism.' - Godwin's "Enquirer", Essay 2. See also "Pol. Jus.", book
8, chapter 2.

It is a calculation of this admirable author, that all the conveniences
of civilized life might be produced, if society would divide the labour
equally among its members, by each individual being employed in labour
two hours during the day.

5. 112, 113: -

or religion
Drives his wife raving mad.

I am acquainted with a lady of considerable accomplishments, and the
mother of a numerous family, whom the Christian religion has goaded to
incurable insanity. A parallel case is, I believe, within the experience
of every physician.

Nam iam saepe homines patriam, carosquo parentes
Prodiderunt, vitare Acherusia templa petentes. - Lucretius.

5. 189: -

Even love is sold.

Not even the intercourse of the sexes is exempt from the despotism of
positive institution. Law pretends even to govern the indisciplinable
wanderings of passion, to put fetters on the clearest deductions of
reason, and, by appeals to the will, to subdue the involuntary
affections of our nature. Love is inevitably consequent upon the
perception of loveliness. Love withers under constraint: its very
essence is liberty: it is compatible neither with obedience, jealousy,
nor fear: it is there most pure, perfect, and unlimited, where its
votaries live in confidence, equality, and unreserve.

How long then ought the sexual connection to last? what law ought to
specify the extent of the grievances which should limit its duration? A
husband and wife ought to continue so long united as they love each
other: any law which should bind them to cohabitation for one moment
after the decay of their affection would be a most intolerable tyranny,
and the most unworthy of toleration. How odious an usurpation of the
right of private judgement should that law be considered which should
make the ties of friendship indissoluble, in spite of the caprices, the
inconstancy, the fallibility, and capacity for improvement of the human
mind. And by so much would the fetters of love be heavier and more
unendurable than those of friendship, as love is more vehement and
capricious, more dependent on those delicate peculiarities of
imagination, and less capable of reduction to the ostensible merits of
the object.

The state of society in which we exist is a mixture of feudal savageness
and imperfect civilization. The narrow and unenlightened morality of the
Christian religion is an aggravation of these evils. It is not even
until lately that mankind have admitted that happiness is the sole end
of the science of ethics, as of all other sciences; and that the
fanatical idea of mortifying the flesh for the love of God has been
discarded. I have heard, indeed, an ignorant collegian adduce, in favour
of Christianity, its hostility to every worldly feeling! (The first
Christian emperor made a law by which seduction was punished with death;
if the female pleaded her own consent, she also was punished with death;
if the parents endeavoured to screen the criminals, they were banished
and their estates were confiscated; the slaves who might be accessory
were burned alive, or forced to swallow melted lead. The very offspring
of an illegal love were involved in the consequences of the
sentence. - Gibbon's "Decline and Fall", etc., volume 2, page 210. See
also, for the hatred of the primitive Christians to love and even
marriage, page 269.)

But if happiness be the object of morality, of all human unions and
disunions; if the worthiness of every action is to be estimated by the
quantity of pleasurable sensation it is calculated to produce, then the
connection of the sexes is so long sacred as it contributes to the
comfort of the parties, and is naturally dissolved when its evils are
greater than its benefits. There is nothing immoral in this separation.
Constancy has nothing virtuous in itself, independently of the pleasure
it confers, and partakes of the temporizing spirit of vice in proportion
as it endures tamely moral defects of magnitude in the object of its
indiscreet choice. Love is free: to promise for ever to love the same
woman is not less absurd than to promise to believe the same creed: such
a vow, in both cases, excludes us from all inquiry. The language of the
votarist is this: The woman I now love may be infinitely inferior to
many others; the creed I now profess may be a mass of errors and
absurdities; but I exclude myself from all future information as to the
amiability of the one and the truth of the other, resolving blindly, and
in spite of conviction, to adhere to them. Is this the language of
delicacy and reason? Is the love of such a frigid heart of more worth
than its belief?

The present system of constraint does no more, in the majority of
instances, than make hypocrites or open enemies. Persons of delicacy and
virtue, unhappily united to one whom they find it impossible to love,
spend the loveliest season of their life in unproductive efforts to
appear otherwise than they are, for the sake of the feelings of their
partner or the welfare of their mutual offspring: those of less
generosity and refinement openly avow their disappointment, and linger
out the remnant of that union, which only death can dissolve, in a state
of incurable bickering and hostility. The early education of their
children takes its colour from the squabbles of the parents; they are
nursed in a systematic school of ill-humour, violence, and falsehood.
Had they been suffered to part at the moment when indifference rendered
their union irksome, they would have been spared many years of misery:
they would have connected themselves more suitably, and would have found
that happiness in the society of more congenial partners which is for
ever denied them by the despotism of marriage. They would have been
separately useful and happy members of society, who, whilst united, were
miserable and rendered misanthropical by misery. The conviction that
wedlock is indissoluble holds out the strongest of all temptations to
the perverse: they indulge without restraint in acrimony, and all the
little tyrannies of domestic life, when they know that their victim is
without appeal. If this connection were put on a rational basis, each
would be assured that habitual ill-temper would terminate in separation,
and would check this vicious and dangerous propensity.

Prostitution is the legitimate offspring of marriage and its
accompanying errors. Women, for no other crime than having followed the
dictates of a natural appetite, are driven with fury from the comforts
and sympathies of society. It is less venial than murder; and the
punishment which is inflicted on her who destroys her child to escape
reproach is lighter than the life of agony and disease to which the
prostitute is irrecoverably doomed. Has a woman obeyed the impulse of
unerring nature; - society declares war against her, pitiless and eternal
war: she must be the tame slave, she must make no reprisals; theirs is
the right of persecution, hers the duty of endurance. She lives a life
of infamy: the loud and bitter laugh of scorn scares her from all
return. She dies of long and lingering disease: yet SHE is in fault, SHE
is the criminal, SHE the froward and untamable child, - and society,
forsooth, the pure and virtuous matron, who casts her as an abortion
from her undefiled bosom! Society avenges herself on the criminals of
her own creation; she is employed in anathematizing the vice to-day,
which yesterday she was the most zealous to teach. Thus is formed
one-tenth of the population of London: meanwhile the evil is twofold.
Young men, excluded by the fanatical idea of chastity from the society
of modest and accomplished women, associate with these vicious and
miserable beings, destroying thereby all those exquisite and delicate
sensibilities whose existence cold-hearted worldlings have denied;
annihilating all genuine passion, and debasing that to a selfish feeling
which is the excess of generosity and devotedness. Their body and mind
alike crumble into a hideous wreck of humanity; idiocy and disease
become perpetuated in their miserable offspring, and distant generations
suffer for the bigoted morality of their forefathers. Chastity is a
monkish and evangelical superstition, a greater foe to natural
temperance even than unintellectual sensuality; it strikes at the root
of all domestic happiness, and consigns more than half of the human race
to misery, that some few may monopolize according to law. A system could
not well have been devised more studiously hostile to human happiness
than marriage.

I conceive that from the abolition of marriage, the fit and natural
arrangement of sexual connection would result. I by no means assert that
the intercourse would be promiscuous: on the contrary, it appears, from
the relation of parent to child, that this union is generally of long
duration, and marked above all others with generosity and self-devotion.
But this is a subject which it is perhaps premature to discuss. That
which will result from the abolition of marriage will be natural and
right; because choice and change will be exempted from restraint.

In fact, religion and morality, as they now stand, compose a practical
code of misery and servitude: the genius of human happiness must tear
every leaf from the accursed book of God ere man can read the
inscription on his heart. How would morality, dressed up in stiff stays
and finery, start from her own disgusting image should she look in the
mirror of nature! -

6. 45, 46: -

To the red and baleful sun
That faintly twinkles there.

The north polar star, to which the axis of the earth, in its present
state of obliquity, points. It is exceedingly probable, from many
considerations, that this obliquity will gradually diminish, until the
equator coincides with the ecliptic: the nights and days will then
become equal on the earth throughout the year, and probably the seasons
also. There is no great extravagance in presuming that the progress of
the perpendicularity of the poles may be as rapid as the progress of
intellect; or that there should be a perfect identity between the moral
and physical improvement of the human species. It is certain that wisdom
is not compatible with disease, and that, in the present state of the
climates of the earth, health, in the true and comprehensive sense of
the word, is out of the reach of civilized man. Astronomy teaches us
that the earth is now in its progress, and that the poles are every year
becoming more and more perpendicular to the ecliptic. The strong
evidence afforded by the history of mythology, and geological
researches, that some event of this nature has taken place already,
affords a strong presumption that this progress is not merely an
oscillation, as has been surmised by some late astronomers. (Laplace,
"Systeme du Monde".)

Bones of animals peculiar to the torrid zone have been found in the
north of Siberia, and on the banks of the river Ohio. Plants have been
found in the fossil state in the interior of Germany, which demand the
present climate of Hindostan for their production. (Cabanis, "Rapports
du Physique et du Moral de l'Homme", volume 2 page 406.) The researches
of M. Bailly establish the existence of a people who inhabited a tract
in Tartary 49 degrees north latitude, of greater antiquity than either
the Indians, the Chinese, or the Chaldeans, from whom these nations
derived their sciences and theology. (Bailly, "Lettres sur les Sciences,
a Voltaire".) We find, from the testimony of ancient writers, that
Britain, Germany, and France were much colder than at present, and that
their great rivers were annually frozen over. Astronomy teaches us also
that since this period the obliquity of the earth's position has been
considerably diminished.

6. 171-173: -

No atom of this turbulence fulfils
A vague and unnecessitated task,
Or acts but as it must and ought to act.

'Deux examples serviront a nous rendre plus sensible le principe qui
vient d'etre pose; nous emprunterons l'un du physique at l'autre du
moral. Dans un tourbillon de poussiere qu'eleve un vent impetueux,
quelque confus qu'il paraisse a nos yeux; dans la plus affreuse tempete
excitee par des vents opposes qui soulevent les flots, - il n'y a pas une
seule molecule de poussiere ou d'eau qui soit placee au HASARD, qui
n'ait sa cause suffisante pour occuper le lieu ou elle se trouve, et qui
n'agisse rigoureusement de la maniere dont ella doit agir. Un geometre
qui connaitrait exactement les differentes forces qui agissent dans ces
deux cas, at las proprietes des molecules qui sent mues, demontrerait
que d'apres des causes donnees, chaque molecule agit precisement comme
ella doit agir, et ne peut agir autrement qu'elle ne fait.

'Dans les convulsions terribles qui agitent quelquefois les societes
politiques, et qui produisent souvent le renversement d'un empire, il
n'y a pas une seule action, une seule parole, une seule pensee, une
seule volonte, une seule passion dans las agens qui concourent a la
revolution comme destructeurs ou comme victimes, qui ne soit necessaire,
qui n'agissa comme ella doit agir, qui n'opere infailliblemont les
effets qu'eile doit operer, suivant la place qu'occupent ces agens dana
ce tourbillon moral. Cela paraitrait evident pour une intelligence qui
sera en etat de saisir et d'apprecier toutes las actions at reactions
des esprits at des corps de ceux qui contribuent a cette
revolution.' - "Systeme de la Nature", volume 1, page 44.

6. 198: -

Necessity! thou mother of the world!

He who asserts the doctrine of Necessity means that, contemplating the
events which compose the moral and material universe, he beholds only an
immense and uninterrupted chain of causes and effects, no one of which
could occupy any other place than it does occupy, or act in any other
place than it does act. The idea of necessity is obtained by our
experience of the connection between objects, the uniformity of the
operations of nature, the constant conjunction of similar events, and
the consequent inference of one from the other. Mankind are therefore
agreed in the admission of necessity, if they admit that these two
circumstances take place in voluntary action. Motive is to voluntary
action in the human mind what cause is to effect in the material
universe. The word liberty, as applied to mind, is analogous to the word
chance as applied to matter: they spring from an ignorance of the
certainty of the conjunction of antecedents and consequents.

Every human being is irresistibly impelled to act precisely as he does
act: in the eternity which preceded his birth a chain of causes was
generated, which, operating under the name of motives, make it
impossible that any thought of his mind, or any action of his life,
should be otherwise than it is. Were the doctrine of Necessity false,
the human mind would no longer be a legitimate object of science; from
like causes it would be in vain that we should expect like effects; the
strongest motive would no longer be paramount over the conduct; all
knowledge would be vague and undeterminate; we could not predict with
any certainty that we might not meet as an enemy to-morrow him with whom
we have parted in friendship to-night; the most probable inducements and
the clearest reasonings would lose the invariable influence they
possess. The contrary of this is demonstrably the fact. Similar
circumstances produce the same unvariable effects. The precise character
and motives of any man on any occasion being given, the moral
philosopher could predict his actions with as much certainty as the
natural philosopher could predict the effects of the mixture of any
particular chemical substances. Why is the aged husbandman more
experienced than the young beginner? Because there is a uniform,
undeniable necessity in the operations of the material universe. Why is
the old statesman more skilful than the raw politician) Because, relying
on the necessary conjunction of motive and action, he proceeds to
produce moral effects, by the application of those moral causes which
experience has shown to be effectual. Some actions may be found to which
we can attach no motives, but these are the effects of causes with which
we are unacquainted. Hence the relation which motive bears to voluntary
action is that of cause to effect; nor, placed in this point of view, is
it, or ever has it been, the subject of popular or philosophical
dispute. None but the few fanatics who are engaged in the herculean task
of reconciling the justice of their God with the misery of man, will
longer outrage common sense by the supposition of an event without a
cause, a voluntary action without a motive. History, politics, morals,
criticism, all grounds of reasonings, all principles of science, alike
assume the truth of the doctrine of Necessity. No farmer carrying his
corn to market doubts the sale of it at the market price. The master of
a manufactory no more doubts that he can purchase the human labour
necessary for his purposes than that his machinery will act as they have
been accustomed to act.

But, whilst none have scrupled to admit necessity as influencing matter,
many have disputed its dominion over mind. Independently of its
militating with the received ideas of the justice of God, it is by no
means obvious to a superficial inquiry. When the mind observes its own
operations, it feels no connection of motive and action: but as we know
'nothing more of causation than the constant conjunction of objects and
the consequent inference of one from the other, as we find that these
two circumstances are universally allowed to have place in voluntary
action, we may be easily led to own that they are subjected to the
necessity common to all causes.' The actions of the will have a regular
conjunction with circumstances and characters; motive is to voluntary
action what cause is to effect. But the only idea we can form of
causation is a constant conjunction of similar objects, and the
consequent inference of one from the other: wherever this is the case
necessity is clearly established.

The idea of liberty, applied metaphorically to the will, has sprung from
a misconception of the meaning of the word power. What is power? - id
quod potest, that which can produce any given effect. To deny power is
to say that nothing can or has the power to be or act. In the only true
sense of the word power, it applies with equal force to the lodestone as
to the human will. Do you think these motives, which I shall present,
are powerful enough to rouse him? is a question just as common as, Do
you think this lever has the power of raising this weight? The advocates
of free-will assert that the will has the power of refusing to be
determined by the strongest motive; but the strongest motive is that
which, overcoming all others, ultimately prevails; this assertion
therefore amounts to a denial of the will being ultimately determined by
that motive which does determine it, which is absurd. But it is equally
certain that a man cannot resist the strongest motive as that he cannot
overcome a physical impossibility.

The doctrine of Necessity tends to introduce a great change into the
established notions of morality, and utterly to destroy religion. Reward
and punishment must be considered, by the Necessarian, merely as motives
which he would employ in order to procure the adoption or abandonment of
any given line of conduct. Desert, in the present sense of the word,
would no longer have any meaning; and he who should inflict pain upon
another for no better reason than that he deserved it, would only
gratify his revenge under pretence of satisfying justice? It is not
enough, says the advocate of free-will, that a criminal should be
prevented from a repetition of his crime: he should feel pain, and his
torments, when justly inflicted, ought precisely to be proportioned to
his fault. But utility is morality; that which is incapable of producing
happiness is useless; and though the crime of Damiens must be condemned,
yet the frightful torments which revenge, under the name of justice,
inflicted on this unhappy man cannot be supposed to have augmented, even
at the long run, the stock of pleasurable sensation in the world. At the
same time, the doctrine of Necessity does not in the least diminish our
disapprobation of vice. The conviction which all feel that a viper is a
poisonous animal, and that a tiger is constrained, by the inevitable
condition of his existence, to devour men, does not induce us to avoid
them lass sedulously, or, even more, to hesitate in destroying them: but
he would surely be of a hard heart who, meeting with a serpent on a
desert island, or in a situation where it was incapable of injury,
should wantonly deprive it of existence. A Necessarian is inconsequent
to his own principles if he indulges in hatred or contempt; the
compassion which he feels for the criminal is unmixed with a desire of
injuring him: he looks with an elevated and dreadless composure upon the
links of the universal chain as they pass before his eyes; whilst
cowardice, curiosity, and inconsistency only assail him in proportion to
the feebleness and indistinctness with which he has perceived and
rejected the delusions of free-will.

Religion is the perception of the relation in which we stand to the
principle of the universe. But if the principle of the universe be not
an organic being, the model and prototype of man, the relation between
it and human beings is absolutely none. Without some insight into its
will respecting our actions religion is nugatory and vain. But will is
only a mode of animal mind; moral qualities also are such as only a
human being can possess; to attribute them to the principle of the
universe is to annex to it properties incompatible with any possible
definition of its nature. It is probable that the word God was
originally only an expression denoting the unknown cause of the known
events which men perceived in the universe. By the vulgar mistake of a
metaphor for a real being, of a word for a thing, it became a man,
endowed with human qualities and governing the universe as an earthly
monarch governs his kingdom. Their addresses to this imaginary being,
indeed, are much in the same style as those of subjects to a king. They
acknowledge his benevolence, deprecate his anger, and supplicate his
favour.

But the doctrine of Necessity teaches us that in no case could any event
have happened otherwise than it did happen, and that, if God is the
author of good, He is also the author of evil; that, if He is entitled
to our gratitude for the one, He is entitled to our hatred for the
other; that, admitting the existence of this hypothetic being, He is
also subjected to the dominion of an immutable necessity. It is plain
that the same arguments which prove that God is the author of food,
light, and life, prove Him also to be the author of poison, darkness,
and death. The wide-wasting earthquake, the storm, the battle, and the
tyranny, are attributable to this hypothetic being in the same degree as
the fairest forms of nature, sunshine, liberty, and peace.

But we are taught, by the doctrine of Necessity, that there is neither
good nor evil in the universe, otherwise than as the events to which we
apply these epithets have relation to our own peculiar mode of being.
Still less than with the hypothesis of a God will the doctrine of
Necessity accord with the belief of a future state of punishment. God
made man such as he is, and than damned him for being so: for to say
that God was the author of all good, and man the author of all evil, is
to say that one man made a straight line and a crooked one, and another
man made the incongruity.

A Mahometan story, much to the present purpose, is recorded, wherein
Adam and Moses are introduced disputing before God in the following
manner. Thou, says Moses, art Adam, whom God created, and animated with
the breath of life, and caused to be worshipped by the angels, and
placed in Paradise, from whence mankind have been expelled for thy
fault. Whereto Adam answered, Thou art Moses, whom God chose for His
apostle, and entrusted with His word, by giving thee the tables of the
law, and whom He vouchsafed to admit to discourse with Himself. How many
years dost thou find the law was written before I was created? Says
Moses, Forty. And dost thou not find, replied Adam, these words therein,
And Adam rebelled against his Lord and transgressed? Which Moses
confessing, Dost thou therefore blame me, continued he, for doing that
which God wrote of me that I should do, forty years before I was
created, nay, for what was decreed concerning me fifty thousand years
before the creation of heaven and earth? - Sale's "Prelim. Disc. to the
Koran", page 164.

7. 13: -

There is no God.

This negation must be understood solely to affect a creative Deity. The
hypothesis of a pervading Spirit co-eternal with the universe remains
unshaken.

A close examination of the validity of the proofs adduced to support any
proposition is the only secure way of attaining truth, on the advantages
of which it is unnecessary to descant: our knowledge of the existence of
a Deity is a subject of such importance that it cannot be too minutely
investigated; in consequence of this conviction we proceed briefly and
impartially to examine the proofs which have been adduced. It is
necessary first to consider the nature of belief.

When a proposition is offered to the mind, it perceives the agreement or
disagreement of the ideas of which it is composed. A perception of their
agreement is termed BELIEF. Many obstacles frequently prevent this
perception from being immediate; these the mind attempts to remove in
order that the perception may be distinct. The mind is active in the
investigation in order to perfect the state of perception of the
relation which the component ideas of the proposition bear to each,
which is passive: the investigation being confused with the perception
has induced many falsely to imagine that the mind is active in
belief, - that belief is an act of volition, - in consequence of which it
may be regulated by the mind. Pursuing, continuing this mistake, they
have attached a degree of criminality to disbelief; of which, in its
nature, it is incapable: it is equally incapable of merit.

Belief, then, is a passion, the strength of which, like every other
passion, is in precise proportion to the degrees of excitement.

The degrees of excitement are three.

The senses are the sources of all knowledge to the mind; consequently
their evidence claims the strongest assent.

The decision of the mind, founded upon our own experience, derived from
these sources, claims the next degree.

The experience of others, which addresses itself to the former one,
occupies the lowest degree.

(A graduated scale, on which should be marked the capabilities of
propositions to approach to the test of the senses, would be a just
barometer of the belief which ought to be attached to them.)

Consequently no testimony can be admitted which is contrary to reason;
reason is founded on the evidence of our senses.

Every proof may be referred to one of these three divisions: it is to be
considered what arguments we receive from each of them, which should
convince us of the existence of a Deity.

1st, The evidence of the senses. If the Deity should appear to us, if He
should convince our senses of His existence, this revelation would
necessarily command belief. Those to whom the Deity has thus appeared
have the strongest possible conviction of His existence. But the God of
Theologians is incapable of local visibility.

2d, Reason. It is urged that man knows that whatever is must either have
had a beginning, or have existed from all eternity: he also knows that
whatever is not eternal must have had a cause. When this reasoning is
applied to the universe, it is necessary to prove that it was created:
until that is clearly demonstrated we may reasonably suppose that it has
endured from all eternity. We must prove design before we can infer a
designer. The only idea which we can form of causation is derivable from
the constant conjunction of objects, and the consequent inference of one
from the other. In a case where two propositions are diametrically
opposite, the mind believes that which is least incomprehensible; - it is
easier to suppose that the universe has existed from all eternity than
to conceive a being beyond its limits capable of creating it: if the
mind sinks beneath the weight of one, is it an alleviation to increase
the intolerability of the burthen?

The other argument, which is founded on a man's knowledge of his own
existence, stands thus. A man knows not only that he now is, but that
once he was not; consequently there must have been a cause. But our idea
of causation is alone derivable from the constant conjunction of objects
and the consequent inference of one from the other; and, reasoning
experimentally, we can only infer from effects causes exactly adequate
to those effects. But there certainly is a generative power which is
effected by certain instruments: we cannot prove that it is inherent in
these instruments; nor is the contrary hypothesis capable of
demonstration: we admit that the generative power is incomprehensible;
but to suppose that the same effect is produced by an eternal,
omniscient, omnipotent being leaves the cause in the same obscurity, but
renders it more incomprehensible.

3d, Testimony. It is required that testimony should not be contrary to
reason. The testimony that the Deity convinces the senses of men of His
existence can only be admitted by us if our mind considers it less
probable that these men should have been deceived than that the Deity
should have appeared to them. Our reason can never admit the testimony
of men, who not only declare that they were eye-witnesses of miracles,
but that the Deity was irrational; for He commanded that He should be
believed, He proposed the highest rewards for faith, eternal punishments
for disbelief. We can only command voluntary actions; belief is not an
act of volition; the mind is even passive, or involuntarily active; from
this it is evident that we have no sufficient testimony, or rather that
testimony is insufficient to prove the being of a God. It has been
before shown that it cannot be deduced from reason. They alone, then,
who have been convinced by the evidence of the senses can believe it.

Hence it is evident that, having no proofs from either of the three
sources of conviction, the mind CANNOT believe the existence of a
creative God: it is also evident that, as belief is a passion of the
mind, no degree of criminality is attachable to disbelief; and that they
only are reprehensible who neglect to remove the false medium through
which their mind views any subject of discussion. Every reflecting mind
must acknowledge that there is no proof of the existence of a Deity.

God is an hypothesis, and, as such, stands in need of proof: the onus
probandi rests on the theist. Sir Isaac Newton says: Hypotheses non
fingo, quicquid enim ex phaenomenis non deducitur hypothesis vocanda
est, et hypothesis vel metaphysicae, vel physicae, vel qualitatum
occultarum, seu mechanicae, in philosophia locum non habent. To all
proofs of the existence of a creative God apply this valuable rule. We
see a variety of bodies possessing a variety of powers: we merely know
their effects; we are in a state of ignorance with respect to their
essences and causes. These Newton calls the phenomena of things; but the
pride of philosophy is unwilling to admit its ignorance of their causes.
From the phenomena, which are the objects of our senses, we attempt to
infer a cause, which we call God, and gratuitously endow it with all
negative and contradictory qualities. From this hypothesis we invent
this general name, to conceal our ignorance of causes and essences. The
being called God by no means answers with the conditions prescribed by
Newton; it bears every mark of a veil woven by philosophical conceit, to
hide the ignorance of philosophers even from themselves. They borrow the
threads of its texture from the anthropomorphism of the vulgar. Words
have been used by sophists for the same purposes, from the occult
qualities of the peripatetics to the effluvium of Boyle and the
crinities or nebulae of Herschel. God is represented as infinite,
eternal, incomprehensible; He is contained under every predicate in non
that the logic of ignorance could fabricate. Even His worshippers allow
that it is impossible to form any idea of Him: they exclaim with the
French poet,

Pour dire ce qu'il est, il faut etre lui-meme.

Lord Bacon says that atheism leaves to man reason, philosophy, natural
piety, laws, reputation, and everything that can serve to conduct him to
virtue; but superstition destroys all these, and erects itself into a
tyranny over the understandings of men: hence atheism never disturbs the
government, but renders man more clear-sighted, since he seas nothing
beyond the boundaries of the present life. - Bacon's "Moral Essays".

La premiere theologie de l'homme lui fit d'abord craindre at adorer les
elements meme, des objets materiels at grossiers; il randit ensuite ses
hommages a des agents presidant aux elements, a des genies inferieurs, a
des heros, ou a des hommes doues de grandes qualites. A force de
reflechir il crut simplifier les choses en soumettant la nature entiere
a un seul agent, a un esprit, a una ame universelle, qui mettait cette
nature et ses parties en mouvement. En remontant de causes en causes,
les mortels ont fini par ne rien voir; at c'est dans cette obscurite
qu'ils ont place leur Dieu; c'est dans cat abime tenebreux que leur
imagination inquiete travaille toujours a se fabriquer des chimeres, qui
les affligeront jusqu'a ce que la connaissance da la nature les detrompe
des fantomes qu'ils ont toujours si vainement adores.

Si nous voulons nous rendre compte de nos idees sur la Divinite, nous
serons obliges de convanir que, par le mot "Dieu", les hommes n'ont
jamais pu designer que la cause la plus cachee, la plus eloignee, la
plus inconnue des effets qu'ils voyaient: ils ne font usage de ce mot,
que lorsque le jeu des causes naturelles at connues cesse d'etre visible
pour eux; des qu'ils perdent le fil de ces causes, on des que leur
esprit ne peut plus en suivre la chaine, ils tranchent leur difficulte,
at terminent leurs recherches en appellant Dieu la derniere des causes,
c'est-a-dire celle qui est au-dela de toutes les causes qu'ils
connaissent; ainsi ils ne font qu'assigner une denomination vague a une
cause ignoree, a laquelle leur paresse ou les bornes de leurs
connaissances les forcent de s'arreter. Toutes les fois qu'on nous dit
que Dieu est l'auteur de quelque phenomene, cela signifie qu'on ignore
comment un tel phenomene a pu s'operer par le secours des forces ou des
causes que nous connaissons dans la nature. C'est ainsi que le commun
des hommes, dont l'ignorance est la partage, attribue a la Divinite non
seulement les effets inusites qui las frappent, mais encore les
evenemens les plus simples, dont les causes sont les plus faciles a
connaitre pour quiconque a pu les mediter. En un mot, l'homme a toujours
respecte les causes inconnues des effets surprenans, que son ignorance
l'empechait de demeler. Ce fut sur les debris de la nature que les
hommes eleverent le colosse imaginaire de la Divinite.

Si l'ignorance de la nature donna la naissance aux dieux, la
connaissance de la nature est faite pour les detruire. A mesure que
l'homme s'instruit, ses forces at ses ressources augmentent avec ses
lumieres; les sciences, les arts conservateurs, l'industrie, lui
fournissent des secours; l'experience le rassure ou lui procure des
moyens de resister aux efforts de bien des causes
qui cessent de l'alarmer des qu'il les a connues. En un mot, ses
terreurs se dissipent dans la meme proportion que son esprit s'eclaire.
L'homnme instruit cesse d'etre superstitieux.

Ce n'est jamais que sur parole que des peuples entiers adorent le Dieu
de leurs peres at de leurs pretres: l'autorite, la confiance, la
soumission, et l'habitude leur tiennent lieu de conviction et de
preuves; ils se prosternent et prient, parce que leurs peres leur out
appris a se prosterner at prier: mais pourquoi ceux-ci se sont-ils mis a
genoux? C'est que dans les temps eloignes leurs legislateurs et leurs
guides leur en ont fait un devoir. 'Adorez at croyez,' ont-ils dit, 'des
dieux que vous ne pouvez comprendre; rapportez-vous-en a notre sagesse
profonde; nous en savons plus que vous sur la divinite.' Mais pourquoi
m'en rapporterais-je a vous? C'est que Dieu le veut ainsi, c'est que
Dieu vous punira si vous osez resister. Mais ce Dieu n'est-il donc pas
la chose en question? Cependant las hommes se sont toujours payes de ce
cercle vicieux; la paresse de leur esprit leur fit trouver plus court de
s'en rapporter au jugament des autres. Toutes las notions religieuses
sent fondees uniquement sur l'autorite; toutes les religions du monde
defendent l'examen et ne veulent pas que l'on raisonne; c'est l'autorite
qui veut qu'on croie en Dieu; ce Dieu n'est lui-meme fonde que sur
l'autorite de quelques hommes qui pretendent le connaitre, et venir de
sa part pour l'annoncer a la terre. Un Dieu fait par les hommes a sans
doute bosom des hommes pour se faire connaitre aux hommes.

Ne serait-ce donc que pour des pretres, des inspires, des metaphysiciens
que serait reservee la conviction de l'existence d'un Dieu, que l'on dit
neanmoins si necessaire a tout le genre humain? Mais trouvons-nous de
l'harmonie entre les opinions theologiques des differens inspires, ou
des penseurs repandus sur la terre? Ceux meme qui font profession
d'adorer le meme Dieu, sent-ils d'accord sur son compte? Sont-ils
contents des preuves que leurs collegues apportent de son existence?
Souscrivent-ils unanimement aux idees qu'ils presentent sur sa nature,
sur sa conduite, sur la facon d'entendre ses pretandus oracles? Est-il
une centree sur la terre ou la science de Dieu se soit reellement
parfectionnee? A-t-elle pris quelqne part la consistance et l'uniformite
que nous voyons prendre aux connaissances humaines, aux arts les plus
futiles, aux metiers les plus meprises? Ces mots d'esprit,
d'immaterialite, de creation, de predestination, de grace; cette foule
de distinctions subtiles dont la theologie s'est parteut remplie dans
quelques pays, ces inventions si ingenieuses, imaginees par des penseurs
qui se sont succedes depuis taut de siecles, n'ont fait, helas!
qu'embrouiller les choses, et jamais la science la plus necassaire aux
hommes n'a jusqu'ici pu acquerir la moindre fixite. Depuis des milliers
d'annees ces reveurs oisifs se sont perpetuellement relayes pour mediter
la Divinite, pour deviner ses voies cachees, pour inventer des
hypotheses propres a developper cette enigme importante. Leur peu de
succes n'a point decourage la vanite theologique; toujours on a parle de
Dieu: on s'est egorge pour lui, et cet etre sublime demeure toujours le
plus ignore et le plus discute.

Les hommes auraient ete trop heureux, si, se bornant aux objets visibles
qui les interessent, ils eussent employe a perfectionner leurs sciences
reelles, leurs lois, leur morale, leur education, la moitie des efforts
qu'ils ont mis dans leurs recherches sur la Divinite. Ils auraiant ete
bien plus sages encore, et plus fortunes, s'ils eussent pu consentir a
laisser leurs guides desoeuvres se quereller entre eux, et sonder des
profondeurs capables de les etourdir, sans se meler de leurs disputes
insensees. Mais il est de l'essence de l'ignorance d'attacher de
l'importance a ce qu'elle ne comprend pas. La vanite humaine fait que
l'esprit se roidit contra des difficultes. Plus un objet se derobe a nos
yeux, plus nous faisons d'efforts pour le saisir, parce que des-lors il
aiguillonne notre orgueil, il excite notre curiosite, il nous parait
interessant. En combattant pour son Dieu chacun ne combattit en effet
que pour les interets de sa propra vanite, qui de toutes les passions
produites par la mal-organisation de la societe est la plus prompte a
s'alarmer, et la plus propre a produire de tres grandes folies.

Si ecartant pour un moment les idees facheuses que la theologie nous
donne d'un Dieu capriciaux, dont les decrets partiaux et despotiques
decident du sort des humains, nous ne voulons fixer nos yeux que sur la
bonte pretendue, que tous les hommes, meme en tramblant devant ce Dieu,
s'accordent a lui donner; si nous lui supposons le projet qu'on lui
prete de n'avoir travaille que pour sa propre gloire, d'exiger les
hommages des etres intelligens; de ne chercher dans ses oeuvres que le
bien-etre du genre humain: comment concilier ces vues et ces
dispositions avec l'ignorance vraiment invincible dans laquelle ce Dieu,
si glorieux et si bon, laisse la plupart des hommes sur son compte? Si
Dieu veut etre connu, cheri, remercie, que ne se montre-t-il sous des
traits favorables a tous ces etres intelligens dont il veut etre aime et
adore? Pourquoi ne point se manifester a toute la terre dune facon non
equivoque, bien plus capable de nous convaincre que ces revelations
particulieres qui semblent accuser la Divinite d'une partialite facheuse
pour quelques-unes de ses creatures? La tout-puissant n'auroit-il donc
pas des moyens plus convainquans de se montrer aux hommas que ces
metamorphoses ridicules, cas incarnations pretendues, qui nous sont
attestees par des ecrivains si peu d'accord entre eux dans les recits
qu'ils en font? Au lieu de tant de miracles, inventes pour prouver la
mission divine de tant de legislateurs reveres par les differens peuples
du monde, le souverain des esprits ne pouvait-il pas convaincre tout
d'un coup l'esprit humain des choses qu'il a voulu lui faire connaitre?
Au lieu de suspendre un soleil dans la voute du firmament; au lieu de
repandre sans ordre les etoiles et les constellations qui remplissent
l'espace, n'eut-il pas ete plus conforme aux vues d'un Dieu si jaloux de
sa gloire et si bien-intentionne pour l'homme d'ecrire, d'une facon non
sujette a dispute, son nom, ses attributs, ses volontes permanentes en
caracteres ineffacables, et lisibles egalement pour tous les habitants
de la terre? Personne alors n'aurait pu douter de l'existence d'un Dieu,
de ses volontes claires, de ses intentions visibles. Sous les yeux de ce
Dieu si terrible, personne n'aurait eu l'audace de violer ses
ordonnances; nul mortel n'eut ose se mettre dans le cas d'attirer sa
colere: enfin nul homme n'eut eu le front d'en imposer en son nom, ou
d'interpreter ses volontes suivant ses propres fantaisies.

En effet, quand meme on admettrait l'existence du Dieu theologique et la
realite des attributs si discordans qu'on lui donne, l'on n'en peut rien
conclure, pour autoriser la conduite ou les cultes qu'on prescrit de lui
rendre. La theologie est vraiment "le tonneau des Danaides". A force de
qualites contradictoires et d'assartions hasardees, ella a, pour ainsi
dire, tellement garrotte son Dieu qu'elle l'a mis dans l'impossibilite
d'agir. S'il est infiniment bon, quelle raison aurions-nous de le
craindre? S'il est infiniment sage, de quoi nous inquieter sur notre
sort? S'il sait tout, pourquoi l'avertir de nos besoins, et le fatiguer
de nos prieres? S'il est partout, pourquoi lui elever des temples? S'il
est maitre de tout, pourquoi lui faire des sacrifices et des offrandes?
S'il est juste, comment croire qu'il punisse des creatures qu'il a
rempli de faiblesses? Si la grace fait tout en elles, quelle raison
aurait-il de les recompenser? S'il est tout-puissant, comment
l'offenser, comment lui resister? S'il est raisonnable, comment se
mattrait-il en colere contre des aveugles, a qui il a laisse la liberte
de deraisonner? S'il est immuable, de quel droit pretendrions-nous faire
changer ses decrets? S'il est inconcevable, pourquoi nous en occuper?
S'IL A PARLE, POURQUOI L'UNIVERS N'EST-IL PAS CONVAINCU? Si la
connaissance d'un Dieu est la plus necessaire, pourquoi n'est-elle pas
la plus evidente et a plus claire? - "Systeme de la Nature", London,
1781.

The enlightened and benevolent Pliny thus publicly professes himself an
atheist: - Quapropter effigiem Dei formamque quaerere imbecillitatis
humanae reor. Quisquis est Deus (si modo est alius) et quacunque in
parte, totus est sensus, totus est visus, totus auditus, totus animae,
totus animi, totus sui...Imperfectae vero in homine naturae praecipua
solatia ne deum quidem posse omnia. Namque nec sibi potest mortem
consciscere, si velit, quad homini dedit optimum in tantis vitae poenis:
nec mortales aeternitata donare, aut revocare defunctos; nec facere ut
qui vixit non vixerit, qui honores gessit non gessarit, nullumque habere
in praeteritum ius, praeterquam oblivionis, atque (ut facetis quoque
argumentis societas haec cum deo copuletur) ut bis dena viginti non
sint, et multa similiter efficere non posse. - Per quae declaratur haud
dubie naturae potentiam id quoque esse quad Deum vocamus. - Plin. "Nat.
Hist." cap. de Deo.

The consistent Newtonian is necessarily an atheist. See Sir W.
Drummond's "Academical Questions", chapter 3. - Sir W. seems to consider
the atheism to which it leads as a sufficient presumption of the
falsehood of the system of gravitation; but surely it is more consistent
with the good faith of philosophy to admit a deduction from facts than
an hypothesis incapable of proof, although it might militate with the
obstinate preconceptions of the mob. Had this author, instead of
inveighing against the guilt and absurdity of atheism, demonstrated its
falsehood, his conduct would have been more suited to the modesty of the
sceptic and the toleration of the philosopher.

Omnia enim per Dei potentiam facta sunt: imo quia naturae potentia nulla
est nisi ipsa Dei potentia. Certum est nos eatenus Dei potentiam non
intelligere, quatenus causas naturales ignoramus; adeoque stulte ad
eandem Dei potentiam recurritur, quando rei alicuius causam naturalem,
sive est, ipsam Dei potantiam ignoramus. - Spinosa, "Tract.
Theologico-Pol." chapter 1, page 14.

7. 67: -

Ahasuerus, rise!

'Ahasuerus the Jew crept forth from the dark cave of Mount Carmel. Near
two thousand years have elapsed since he was first goaded by
never-ending restlessness to rove the globe from pole to pole. When our
Lord was wearied with the burthen of His ponderous cross, and wanted to
rest before the door of Ahasuerus, the unfeeling wretch drove Him away
with brutality. The Saviour of mankind staggered, sinking under the
heavy load, but uttered no complaint. An angel of death appeared before
Ahasuerus, and exclaimed indignant


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