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Unhappy Man! by Nature made to sway,And yet is every Creatures prey,Destroy’d by those that should his power obey.Of the whole World we callMankindthe Lords,Flattring our selves with mighty words;Of all things we the Monarchs are,And so we rule, and so we domineer;All creatures else about us standLike somePrætorianBand,To guard, to help, and to defend;Yet they sometimes prove Enemies,Sometimes against us rise;Our very Guards rebel, and tyrannize.Thousand Diseases sent by Fate,(Unhappie Servants!) on us wait;A thousand Treacheries withinAre laid weak Life to win;Huge Troops of Maladies without,(A grim, a meager, and a dreadful rout:)Some formal Sieges makeAnd with sure slowness do our Bodies take;Some with quick violence storm the Town,And all in a moment down:Some one peculiar sort assail,Some by general attempt prevail.Small Herbs, alas, can onely us relieve,And small is the assistance they can give;How can the fading Off spring of the FieldSure health and succour yield?What strong and certain remedie?What firm and lasting life can ours be?When that which makes us live, doth ev’ry Winter die?
Unhappy Man! by Nature made to sway,And yet is every Creatures prey,Destroy’d by those that should his power obey.Of the whole World we callMankindthe Lords,Flattring our selves with mighty words;Of all things we the Monarchs are,And so we rule, and so we domineer;All creatures else about us standLike somePrætorianBand,To guard, to help, and to defend;Yet they sometimes prove Enemies,Sometimes against us rise;Our very Guards rebel, and tyrannize.Thousand Diseases sent by Fate,(Unhappie Servants!) on us wait;A thousand Treacheries withinAre laid weak Life to win;Huge Troops of Maladies without,(A grim, a meager, and a dreadful rout:)Some formal Sieges makeAnd with sure slowness do our Bodies take;Some with quick violence storm the Town,And all in a moment down:Some one peculiar sort assail,Some by general attempt prevail.Small Herbs, alas, can onely us relieve,And small is the assistance they can give;How can the fading Off spring of the FieldSure health and succour yield?What strong and certain remedie?What firm and lasting life can ours be?When that which makes us live, doth ev’ry Winter die?
Unhappy Man! by Nature made to sway,And yet is every Creatures prey,Destroy’d by those that should his power obey.Of the whole World we callMankindthe Lords,Flattring our selves with mighty words;Of all things we the Monarchs are,And so we rule, and so we domineer;All creatures else about us standLike somePrætorianBand,To guard, to help, and to defend;Yet they sometimes prove Enemies,Sometimes against us rise;Our very Guards rebel, and tyrannize.Thousand Diseases sent by Fate,(Unhappie Servants!) on us wait;A thousand Treacheries withinAre laid weak Life to win;Huge Troops of Maladies without,(A grim, a meager, and a dreadful rout:)Some formal Sieges makeAnd with sure slowness do our Bodies take;Some with quick violence storm the Town,And all in a moment down:Some one peculiar sort assail,Some by general attempt prevail.Small Herbs, alas, can onely us relieve,And small is the assistance they can give;How can the fading Off spring of the FieldSure health and succour yield?What strong and certain remedie?What firm and lasting life can ours be?When that which makes us live, doth ev’ry Winter die?
Unhappy Man! by Nature made to sway,
And yet is every Creatures prey,
Destroy’d by those that should his power obey.
Of the whole World we callMankindthe Lords,
Flattring our selves with mighty words;
Of all things we the Monarchs are,
And so we rule, and so we domineer;
All creatures else about us stand
Like somePrætorianBand,
To guard, to help, and to defend;
Yet they sometimes prove Enemies,
Sometimes against us rise;
Our very Guards rebel, and tyrannize.
Thousand Diseases sent by Fate,
(Unhappie Servants!) on us wait;
A thousand Treacheries within
Are laid weak Life to win;
Huge Troops of Maladies without,
(A grim, a meager, and a dreadful rout:)
Some formal Sieges make
And with sure slowness do our Bodies take;
Some with quick violence storm the Town,
And all in a moment down:
Some one peculiar sort assail,
Some by general attempt prevail.
Small Herbs, alas, can onely us relieve,
And small is the assistance they can give;
How can the fading Off spring of the Field
Sure health and succour yield?
What strong and certain remedie?
What firm and lasting life can ours be?
When that which makes us live, doth ev’ry Winter die?
II.
Nor is this all, we do not onely breedWithin our selves the fatal seedOf change, and of decrease in ev’ry part,Head, Bellie, Stomach, and the Root of Life the Heart,Not onely have our Autumn, when we mustOf our own Nature turn to Dust,When Leaves and Fruit must fall;But are expos’d to mighty Tempests too,Which do at once what that would slowlie do,Which throw down Fruit and Tree of Life withal.From ruine we in vainOur bodies by repair maintain,Bodies compos’d of stuff,Mouldring and frail enough;Yet from without as well we fearA dangerous and destructful War,From Heaven, from Earth, from Sea, from Air.We like theRoman Empireshould decay,And our own force would melt awayBy the intestine jarOf Elephants, which on each other prey,TheCæsarsand thePompeyswhich within we bear:Yet are (like that) in danger tooOf forreign Armies, and external foe,Sometimes theGothishand the barbarous rageOf Plague, or Pestilence, attends Mans age,Which neither Force nor Arts asswage;Which cannot be avoided, or withstood,But drowns, and over-runs with unexpected Flood.
Nor is this all, we do not onely breedWithin our selves the fatal seedOf change, and of decrease in ev’ry part,Head, Bellie, Stomach, and the Root of Life the Heart,Not onely have our Autumn, when we mustOf our own Nature turn to Dust,When Leaves and Fruit must fall;But are expos’d to mighty Tempests too,Which do at once what that would slowlie do,Which throw down Fruit and Tree of Life withal.From ruine we in vainOur bodies by repair maintain,Bodies compos’d of stuff,Mouldring and frail enough;Yet from without as well we fearA dangerous and destructful War,From Heaven, from Earth, from Sea, from Air.We like theRoman Empireshould decay,And our own force would melt awayBy the intestine jarOf Elephants, which on each other prey,TheCæsarsand thePompeyswhich within we bear:Yet are (like that) in danger tooOf forreign Armies, and external foe,Sometimes theGothishand the barbarous rageOf Plague, or Pestilence, attends Mans age,Which neither Force nor Arts asswage;Which cannot be avoided, or withstood,But drowns, and over-runs with unexpected Flood.
Nor is this all, we do not onely breedWithin our selves the fatal seedOf change, and of decrease in ev’ry part,Head, Bellie, Stomach, and the Root of Life the Heart,Not onely have our Autumn, when we mustOf our own Nature turn to Dust,When Leaves and Fruit must fall;But are expos’d to mighty Tempests too,Which do at once what that would slowlie do,Which throw down Fruit and Tree of Life withal.From ruine we in vainOur bodies by repair maintain,Bodies compos’d of stuff,Mouldring and frail enough;Yet from without as well we fearA dangerous and destructful War,From Heaven, from Earth, from Sea, from Air.We like theRoman Empireshould decay,And our own force would melt awayBy the intestine jarOf Elephants, which on each other prey,TheCæsarsand thePompeyswhich within we bear:Yet are (like that) in danger tooOf forreign Armies, and external foe,Sometimes theGothishand the barbarous rageOf Plague, or Pestilence, attends Mans age,Which neither Force nor Arts asswage;Which cannot be avoided, or withstood,But drowns, and over-runs with unexpected Flood.
Nor is this all, we do not onely breed
Within our selves the fatal seed
Of change, and of decrease in ev’ry part,
Head, Bellie, Stomach, and the Root of Life the Heart,
Not onely have our Autumn, when we must
Of our own Nature turn to Dust,
When Leaves and Fruit must fall;
But are expos’d to mighty Tempests too,
Which do at once what that would slowlie do,
Which throw down Fruit and Tree of Life withal.
From ruine we in vain
Our bodies by repair maintain,
Bodies compos’d of stuff,
Mouldring and frail enough;
Yet from without as well we fear
A dangerous and destructful War,
From Heaven, from Earth, from Sea, from Air.
We like theRoman Empireshould decay,
And our own force would melt away
By the intestine jar
Of Elephants, which on each other prey,
TheCæsarsand thePompeyswhich within we bear:
Yet are (like that) in danger too
Of forreign Armies, and external foe,
Sometimes theGothishand the barbarous rage
Of Plague, or Pestilence, attends Mans age,
Which neither Force nor Arts asswage;
Which cannot be avoided, or withstood,
But drowns, and over-runs with unexpected Flood.
III.
OnÆthiopia, and the Southern-sands,The unfrequented Coasts, and parched Land,Whither the Sun too kind a heat doth send,(The Sun, which the worst Neighbour is, and the best Friend)Hither a mortal influence came,A fatal and unhappy flame,Kindled by Heavens angry beam.With dreadful frowns the Heavens scattered hereCruel infectious heats into the Air,Now all their stores of poyson sent,Threatning at once a general doom,Lavisht out all their hate, and meantIn future Ages to be innocent,Not to disturb the World for many years to come.Hold! Heavens hold! Why should your Sacred Fire,Which doth to all things Life inspire,By whose kinde beams you bringEach year on every thing,A new and glorious Spring,Which doth th’ Original SeedOf all things in the Womb of Earth that breed,With vital heat and quick’ning seed,Why should you now that heat imploy,The Earth, the Air, the Fields, the Cities to annoy?That which before reviv’d, why should it now destroy?
OnÆthiopia, and the Southern-sands,The unfrequented Coasts, and parched Land,Whither the Sun too kind a heat doth send,(The Sun, which the worst Neighbour is, and the best Friend)Hither a mortal influence came,A fatal and unhappy flame,Kindled by Heavens angry beam.With dreadful frowns the Heavens scattered hereCruel infectious heats into the Air,Now all their stores of poyson sent,Threatning at once a general doom,Lavisht out all their hate, and meantIn future Ages to be innocent,Not to disturb the World for many years to come.Hold! Heavens hold! Why should your Sacred Fire,Which doth to all things Life inspire,By whose kinde beams you bringEach year on every thing,A new and glorious Spring,Which doth th’ Original SeedOf all things in the Womb of Earth that breed,With vital heat and quick’ning seed,Why should you now that heat imploy,The Earth, the Air, the Fields, the Cities to annoy?That which before reviv’d, why should it now destroy?
OnÆthiopia, and the Southern-sands,The unfrequented Coasts, and parched Land,Whither the Sun too kind a heat doth send,(The Sun, which the worst Neighbour is, and the best Friend)Hither a mortal influence came,A fatal and unhappy flame,Kindled by Heavens angry beam.With dreadful frowns the Heavens scattered hereCruel infectious heats into the Air,Now all their stores of poyson sent,Threatning at once a general doom,Lavisht out all their hate, and meantIn future Ages to be innocent,Not to disturb the World for many years to come.Hold! Heavens hold! Why should your Sacred Fire,Which doth to all things Life inspire,By whose kinde beams you bringEach year on every thing,A new and glorious Spring,Which doth th’ Original SeedOf all things in the Womb of Earth that breed,With vital heat and quick’ning seed,Why should you now that heat imploy,The Earth, the Air, the Fields, the Cities to annoy?That which before reviv’d, why should it now destroy?
OnÆthiopia, and the Southern-sands,
The unfrequented Coasts, and parched Land,
Whither the Sun too kind a heat doth send,
(The Sun, which the worst Neighbour is, and the best Friend)
Hither a mortal influence came,
A fatal and unhappy flame,
Kindled by Heavens angry beam.
With dreadful frowns the Heavens scattered here
Cruel infectious heats into the Air,
Now all their stores of poyson sent,
Threatning at once a general doom,
Lavisht out all their hate, and meant
In future Ages to be innocent,
Not to disturb the World for many years to come.
Hold! Heavens hold! Why should your Sacred Fire,
Which doth to all things Life inspire,
By whose kinde beams you bring
Each year on every thing,
A new and glorious Spring,
Which doth th’ Original Seed
Of all things in the Womb of Earth that breed,
With vital heat and quick’ning seed,
Why should you now that heat imploy,
The Earth, the Air, the Fields, the Cities to annoy?
That which before reviv’d, why should it now destroy?
IV.
ThoseAfrickDesarts strait were double Desarts grown,The rav’nous Beasts were left alone,The rav’nous beasts then first beganTo pity their old enemy Man,And blam’d the Plague for what they would themselves have done.Nor stay’d the cruel evil there,Nor could be long confin’d unto one Air,Plagues presently forsakeThe Wilderness which they themselves do make,Away the deadly breaths their journey take.Driven by a mighty wind,They a new booty and fresh forrage find.The loaded wind went swiftly on,And as it past was heard to sigh and groan.OnÆgyptnext it seiz’d,Nor could but by a general ruine be appeas’d.Ægyptin rage back on the South did look,And wondred thence should come th’ unhappy stroke,From whence before her fruitfulness she took.Egyptdid now curse and revileThose very Lands from whence she has herNile;Egyptnow fear’d anotherHebrewGod,Another Angels Hand, a secondAaronsRod.
ThoseAfrickDesarts strait were double Desarts grown,The rav’nous Beasts were left alone,The rav’nous beasts then first beganTo pity their old enemy Man,And blam’d the Plague for what they would themselves have done.Nor stay’d the cruel evil there,Nor could be long confin’d unto one Air,Plagues presently forsakeThe Wilderness which they themselves do make,Away the deadly breaths their journey take.Driven by a mighty wind,They a new booty and fresh forrage find.The loaded wind went swiftly on,And as it past was heard to sigh and groan.OnÆgyptnext it seiz’d,Nor could but by a general ruine be appeas’d.Ægyptin rage back on the South did look,And wondred thence should come th’ unhappy stroke,From whence before her fruitfulness she took.Egyptdid now curse and revileThose very Lands from whence she has herNile;Egyptnow fear’d anotherHebrewGod,Another Angels Hand, a secondAaronsRod.
ThoseAfrickDesarts strait were double Desarts grown,The rav’nous Beasts were left alone,The rav’nous beasts then first beganTo pity their old enemy Man,And blam’d the Plague for what they would themselves have done.Nor stay’d the cruel evil there,Nor could be long confin’d unto one Air,Plagues presently forsakeThe Wilderness which they themselves do make,Away the deadly breaths their journey take.Driven by a mighty wind,They a new booty and fresh forrage find.The loaded wind went swiftly on,And as it past was heard to sigh and groan.OnÆgyptnext it seiz’d,Nor could but by a general ruine be appeas’d.Ægyptin rage back on the South did look,And wondred thence should come th’ unhappy stroke,From whence before her fruitfulness she took.Egyptdid now curse and revileThose very Lands from whence she has herNile;Egyptnow fear’d anotherHebrewGod,Another Angels Hand, a secondAaronsRod.
ThoseAfrickDesarts strait were double Desarts grown,
The rav’nous Beasts were left alone,
The rav’nous beasts then first began
To pity their old enemy Man,
And blam’d the Plague for what they would themselves have done.
Nor stay’d the cruel evil there,
Nor could be long confin’d unto one Air,
Plagues presently forsake
The Wilderness which they themselves do make,
Away the deadly breaths their journey take.
Driven by a mighty wind,
They a new booty and fresh forrage find.
The loaded wind went swiftly on,
And as it past was heard to sigh and groan.
OnÆgyptnext it seiz’d,
Nor could but by a general ruine be appeas’d.
Ægyptin rage back on the South did look,
And wondred thence should come th’ unhappy stroke,
From whence before her fruitfulness she took.
Egyptdid now curse and revile
Those very Lands from whence she has herNile;
Egyptnow fear’d anotherHebrewGod,
Another Angels Hand, a secondAaronsRod.
V.
Then on it goes, and through the Sacred LandIts angry Forces did command,But God did place an Angel there,Its violence to withstand,And turn into another road the putrid Air.ToTyreit came, and there did all devour,Though that by Seas might think it self secure:Nor staid, as thegreat Conquerorsdid,Till it had fill’d and stopt the tyde,Which did it from the shore divide,But past the waters, and did all possess,And quickly all was wilderness.Thence it didPersiaover-run,And all that Sacrifice unto the Sun;In every Limb a dreadful pain they felt,Tortur’d with secret coals did melt;ThePersianscall’d upon their Sun in vain,Their God increas’d the pain.They lookt up to their God no more,But curse the beams they worshipped before,And hate the very fire which once they did adore.
Then on it goes, and through the Sacred LandIts angry Forces did command,But God did place an Angel there,Its violence to withstand,And turn into another road the putrid Air.ToTyreit came, and there did all devour,Though that by Seas might think it self secure:Nor staid, as thegreat Conquerorsdid,Till it had fill’d and stopt the tyde,Which did it from the shore divide,But past the waters, and did all possess,And quickly all was wilderness.Thence it didPersiaover-run,And all that Sacrifice unto the Sun;In every Limb a dreadful pain they felt,Tortur’d with secret coals did melt;ThePersianscall’d upon their Sun in vain,Their God increas’d the pain.They lookt up to their God no more,But curse the beams they worshipped before,And hate the very fire which once they did adore.
Then on it goes, and through the Sacred LandIts angry Forces did command,But God did place an Angel there,Its violence to withstand,And turn into another road the putrid Air.ToTyreit came, and there did all devour,Though that by Seas might think it self secure:Nor staid, as thegreat Conquerorsdid,Till it had fill’d and stopt the tyde,Which did it from the shore divide,But past the waters, and did all possess,And quickly all was wilderness.Thence it didPersiaover-run,And all that Sacrifice unto the Sun;In every Limb a dreadful pain they felt,Tortur’d with secret coals did melt;ThePersianscall’d upon their Sun in vain,Their God increas’d the pain.They lookt up to their God no more,But curse the beams they worshipped before,And hate the very fire which once they did adore.
Then on it goes, and through the Sacred Land
Its angry Forces did command,
But God did place an Angel there,
Its violence to withstand,
And turn into another road the putrid Air.
ToTyreit came, and there did all devour,
Though that by Seas might think it self secure:
Nor staid, as thegreat Conquerorsdid,
Till it had fill’d and stopt the tyde,
Which did it from the shore divide,
But past the waters, and did all possess,
And quickly all was wilderness.
Thence it didPersiaover-run,
And all that Sacrifice unto the Sun;
In every Limb a dreadful pain they felt,
Tortur’d with secret coals did melt;
ThePersianscall’d upon their Sun in vain,
Their God increas’d the pain.
They lookt up to their God no more,
But curse the beams they worshipped before,
And hate the very fire which once they did adore.
VI.
Glutted with ruine of the East,She took her wings and down toAthenspast:Just Plague! which dost no parties take,ButGreeceas well asPersiasack,While in unnatural quarrels they(Like Frogs and Mice) each other slay,Thou in thy ravenous claws took’st both away.Thither it came and did destroy the Town,Whilest all its Ships and Souldiers lookt upon:And now theAsianPlague did moreThan all theAsianForce could do before.Without the Walls theSpartanArmy sate,TheSpartanArmy came too late;For now there was no farther work for fate.They saw the Citie open lay,An easie and a bloodless prey,They saw the rampires emptie stand,The Fleet, the Walls, the Forts Unman’d.No need of crueltie or slaughters nowThe Plague had finisht what they came to do:They might now unresisted enter there,Did they not the very Air,More than th’Atheniansfear.The Air it self to them was wall, and bullwarks too.
Glutted with ruine of the East,She took her wings and down toAthenspast:Just Plague! which dost no parties take,ButGreeceas well asPersiasack,While in unnatural quarrels they(Like Frogs and Mice) each other slay,Thou in thy ravenous claws took’st both away.Thither it came and did destroy the Town,Whilest all its Ships and Souldiers lookt upon:And now theAsianPlague did moreThan all theAsianForce could do before.Without the Walls theSpartanArmy sate,TheSpartanArmy came too late;For now there was no farther work for fate.They saw the Citie open lay,An easie and a bloodless prey,They saw the rampires emptie stand,The Fleet, the Walls, the Forts Unman’d.No need of crueltie or slaughters nowThe Plague had finisht what they came to do:They might now unresisted enter there,Did they not the very Air,More than th’Atheniansfear.The Air it self to them was wall, and bullwarks too.
Glutted with ruine of the East,She took her wings and down toAthenspast:Just Plague! which dost no parties take,ButGreeceas well asPersiasack,While in unnatural quarrels they(Like Frogs and Mice) each other slay,Thou in thy ravenous claws took’st both away.Thither it came and did destroy the Town,Whilest all its Ships and Souldiers lookt upon:And now theAsianPlague did moreThan all theAsianForce could do before.Without the Walls theSpartanArmy sate,TheSpartanArmy came too late;For now there was no farther work for fate.They saw the Citie open lay,An easie and a bloodless prey,They saw the rampires emptie stand,The Fleet, the Walls, the Forts Unman’d.No need of crueltie or slaughters nowThe Plague had finisht what they came to do:They might now unresisted enter there,Did they not the very Air,More than th’Atheniansfear.The Air it self to them was wall, and bullwarks too.
Glutted with ruine of the East,
She took her wings and down toAthenspast:
Just Plague! which dost no parties take,
ButGreeceas well asPersiasack,
While in unnatural quarrels they
(Like Frogs and Mice) each other slay,
Thou in thy ravenous claws took’st both away.
Thither it came and did destroy the Town,
Whilest all its Ships and Souldiers lookt upon:
And now theAsianPlague did more
Than all theAsianForce could do before.
Without the Walls theSpartanArmy sate,
TheSpartanArmy came too late;
For now there was no farther work for fate.
They saw the Citie open lay,
An easie and a bloodless prey,
They saw the rampires emptie stand,
The Fleet, the Walls, the Forts Unman’d.
No need of crueltie or slaughters now
The Plague had finisht what they came to do:
They might now unresisted enter there,
Did they not the very Air,
More than th’Atheniansfear.
The Air it self to them was wall, and bullwarks too.
VII.
UnhappyAthens! it is true, thou wertThe proudest work of Nature and of Art:Learning and strength did thee compose,As soul and body us:But yet thou onely thence art madeA nobler prey for Fates t’ invade.Those mighty numbers that within thee breath,Do onely serve to make a fatter feast for Death.Death in the most frequented places lives,Most tribute from the croud receives;And though it bears a sigh, and seems to ownA rustick life alone:It loves no Wilderness,No scattred Villages,But mighty populous Palaces,The throng, the tumult, and the town;What strange, unheard-of Conqueror is this,Which by the forces that resist it doth increase!When other Conquerors areOblig’d to make a slower war,Nay sometimes for themselves may fear,And must proceed with watchful care,When thicker troops of enemies appear;This stronger still, and more successeful grows,Down sooner all before it throws,If greater multitudes of men do it oppose.
UnhappyAthens! it is true, thou wertThe proudest work of Nature and of Art:Learning and strength did thee compose,As soul and body us:But yet thou onely thence art madeA nobler prey for Fates t’ invade.Those mighty numbers that within thee breath,Do onely serve to make a fatter feast for Death.Death in the most frequented places lives,Most tribute from the croud receives;And though it bears a sigh, and seems to ownA rustick life alone:It loves no Wilderness,No scattred Villages,But mighty populous Palaces,The throng, the tumult, and the town;What strange, unheard-of Conqueror is this,Which by the forces that resist it doth increase!When other Conquerors areOblig’d to make a slower war,Nay sometimes for themselves may fear,And must proceed with watchful care,When thicker troops of enemies appear;This stronger still, and more successeful grows,Down sooner all before it throws,If greater multitudes of men do it oppose.
UnhappyAthens! it is true, thou wertThe proudest work of Nature and of Art:Learning and strength did thee compose,As soul and body us:But yet thou onely thence art madeA nobler prey for Fates t’ invade.Those mighty numbers that within thee breath,Do onely serve to make a fatter feast for Death.Death in the most frequented places lives,Most tribute from the croud receives;And though it bears a sigh, and seems to ownA rustick life alone:It loves no Wilderness,No scattred Villages,But mighty populous Palaces,The throng, the tumult, and the town;What strange, unheard-of Conqueror is this,Which by the forces that resist it doth increase!When other Conquerors areOblig’d to make a slower war,Nay sometimes for themselves may fear,And must proceed with watchful care,When thicker troops of enemies appear;This stronger still, and more successeful grows,Down sooner all before it throws,If greater multitudes of men do it oppose.
UnhappyAthens! it is true, thou wert
The proudest work of Nature and of Art:
Learning and strength did thee compose,
As soul and body us:
But yet thou onely thence art made
A nobler prey for Fates t’ invade.
Those mighty numbers that within thee breath,
Do onely serve to make a fatter feast for Death.
Death in the most frequented places lives,
Most tribute from the croud receives;
And though it bears a sigh, and seems to own
A rustick life alone:
It loves no Wilderness,
No scattred Villages,
But mighty populous Palaces,
The throng, the tumult, and the town;
What strange, unheard-of Conqueror is this,
Which by the forces that resist it doth increase!
When other Conquerors are
Oblig’d to make a slower war,
Nay sometimes for themselves may fear,
And must proceed with watchful care,
When thicker troops of enemies appear;
This stronger still, and more successeful grows,
Down sooner all before it throws,
If greater multitudes of men do it oppose.
VIII.
The Tyrant first the haven did subdue,Lately theAthenians(it knew)Themselves by wooden walls did save,And therefore first to them th’ infection gave,Least they new succour thence receive.CruelPyræus! now thou hast undone,The honour thou before hadst wone:Not all thy Merchandize,Thy wealth, thy treasuries,Which from all Coasts thy Fleet supplies,Can to atone this crime suffice.Next o’re the upper Town it spread,With mad and undiscerned speed;In every corner, every street,Without a guide did sets its feet,And too familiar every house did greet.UnhappyGreeceofGreece! greatTheseusnowDid thee a mortal injury do,When first in walls he did thee close,When first he did thy Citizens reduce,Houses and Government, and Lawes to use.It had been better if thy people stillDispersed in some field, or hill,Though Salvage, and undisciplin’d did dwell,Though barbarous, untame, and rude,Than by their numbers thus to be subdu’d;To be by their own swarms anoid,And to be civilized onely to be destroid.
The Tyrant first the haven did subdue,Lately theAthenians(it knew)Themselves by wooden walls did save,And therefore first to them th’ infection gave,Least they new succour thence receive.CruelPyræus! now thou hast undone,The honour thou before hadst wone:Not all thy Merchandize,Thy wealth, thy treasuries,Which from all Coasts thy Fleet supplies,Can to atone this crime suffice.Next o’re the upper Town it spread,With mad and undiscerned speed;In every corner, every street,Without a guide did sets its feet,And too familiar every house did greet.UnhappyGreeceofGreece! greatTheseusnowDid thee a mortal injury do,When first in walls he did thee close,When first he did thy Citizens reduce,Houses and Government, and Lawes to use.It had been better if thy people stillDispersed in some field, or hill,Though Salvage, and undisciplin’d did dwell,Though barbarous, untame, and rude,Than by their numbers thus to be subdu’d;To be by their own swarms anoid,And to be civilized onely to be destroid.
The Tyrant first the haven did subdue,Lately theAthenians(it knew)Themselves by wooden walls did save,And therefore first to them th’ infection gave,Least they new succour thence receive.CruelPyræus! now thou hast undone,The honour thou before hadst wone:Not all thy Merchandize,Thy wealth, thy treasuries,Which from all Coasts thy Fleet supplies,Can to atone this crime suffice.Next o’re the upper Town it spread,With mad and undiscerned speed;In every corner, every street,Without a guide did sets its feet,And too familiar every house did greet.UnhappyGreeceofGreece! greatTheseusnowDid thee a mortal injury do,When first in walls he did thee close,When first he did thy Citizens reduce,Houses and Government, and Lawes to use.It had been better if thy people stillDispersed in some field, or hill,Though Salvage, and undisciplin’d did dwell,Though barbarous, untame, and rude,Than by their numbers thus to be subdu’d;To be by their own swarms anoid,And to be civilized onely to be destroid.
The Tyrant first the haven did subdue,
Lately theAthenians(it knew)
Themselves by wooden walls did save,
And therefore first to them th’ infection gave,
Least they new succour thence receive.
CruelPyræus! now thou hast undone,
The honour thou before hadst wone:
Not all thy Merchandize,
Thy wealth, thy treasuries,
Which from all Coasts thy Fleet supplies,
Can to atone this crime suffice.
Next o’re the upper Town it spread,
With mad and undiscerned speed;
In every corner, every street,
Without a guide did sets its feet,
And too familiar every house did greet.
UnhappyGreeceofGreece! greatTheseusnow
Did thee a mortal injury do,
When first in walls he did thee close,
When first he did thy Citizens reduce,
Houses and Government, and Lawes to use.
It had been better if thy people still
Dispersed in some field, or hill,
Though Salvage, and undisciplin’d did dwell,
Though barbarous, untame, and rude,
Than by their numbers thus to be subdu’d;
To be by their own swarms anoid,
And to be civilized onely to be destroid.
IX.
Minervastarted when she heard the noise,And dying mens confused voice.From Heaven in haste she came to seeWhat was the mighty prodigie.Upon the Castle pinacles she sate,And dar’d not nearer fly,Nor midst so many deaths to trust her very Deity.With pitying look she saw at every gateDeath and destruction wait;She wrung her hands, and call’d onJove,And all th’ immortal powers above;But though a Goddess now did prey,The Heavens refus’d, and turn’d their ear away.She brought her Olive, and her Shield,Neither of these Alas! assistance yield.She lookt uponMedusaesface,Was angry that she wasHer self of an Immortal Race,Was angry that her Gorgons headCould not strike her as well as others dead;She sate, and wept awhile, and then away she fled.
Minervastarted when she heard the noise,And dying mens confused voice.From Heaven in haste she came to seeWhat was the mighty prodigie.Upon the Castle pinacles she sate,And dar’d not nearer fly,Nor midst so many deaths to trust her very Deity.With pitying look she saw at every gateDeath and destruction wait;She wrung her hands, and call’d onJove,And all th’ immortal powers above;But though a Goddess now did prey,The Heavens refus’d, and turn’d their ear away.She brought her Olive, and her Shield,Neither of these Alas! assistance yield.She lookt uponMedusaesface,Was angry that she wasHer self of an Immortal Race,Was angry that her Gorgons headCould not strike her as well as others dead;She sate, and wept awhile, and then away she fled.
Minervastarted when she heard the noise,And dying mens confused voice.From Heaven in haste she came to seeWhat was the mighty prodigie.Upon the Castle pinacles she sate,And dar’d not nearer fly,Nor midst so many deaths to trust her very Deity.With pitying look she saw at every gateDeath and destruction wait;She wrung her hands, and call’d onJove,And all th’ immortal powers above;But though a Goddess now did prey,The Heavens refus’d, and turn’d their ear away.She brought her Olive, and her Shield,Neither of these Alas! assistance yield.She lookt uponMedusaesface,Was angry that she wasHer self of an Immortal Race,Was angry that her Gorgons headCould not strike her as well as others dead;She sate, and wept awhile, and then away she fled.
Minervastarted when she heard the noise,
And dying mens confused voice.
From Heaven in haste she came to see
What was the mighty prodigie.
Upon the Castle pinacles she sate,
And dar’d not nearer fly,
Nor midst so many deaths to trust her very Deity.
With pitying look she saw at every gate
Death and destruction wait;
She wrung her hands, and call’d onJove,
And all th’ immortal powers above;
But though a Goddess now did prey,
The Heavens refus’d, and turn’d their ear away.
She brought her Olive, and her Shield,
Neither of these Alas! assistance yield.
She lookt uponMedusaesface,
Was angry that she was
Her self of an Immortal Race,
Was angry that her Gorgons head
Could not strike her as well as others dead;
She sate, and wept awhile, and then away she fled.
X.
Now Death began her sword to whet,Not all theCyclopssweat,NorVulcausmighty Anvils could prepareWeapons enough for her,No weapon large enough but all the Air;Men felt the heatwithin him rage,And hop’d the Air would it asswage,Call’d for its help, but th’ Air did them deceive,And aggravate the ills it should relieve.The Air no more was Vital now,But did a mortal poyson grow;The Lungs which us’d to fann the heart,Onely now serv’d to fire each part,What should refresh, increas’d the smart,And now their very breath,The chiefest sign of life, turn’d the cause of death.
Now Death began her sword to whet,Not all theCyclopssweat,NorVulcausmighty Anvils could prepareWeapons enough for her,No weapon large enough but all the Air;Men felt the heatwithin him rage,And hop’d the Air would it asswage,Call’d for its help, but th’ Air did them deceive,And aggravate the ills it should relieve.The Air no more was Vital now,But did a mortal poyson grow;The Lungs which us’d to fann the heart,Onely now serv’d to fire each part,What should refresh, increas’d the smart,And now their very breath,The chiefest sign of life, turn’d the cause of death.
Now Death began her sword to whet,Not all theCyclopssweat,NorVulcausmighty Anvils could prepareWeapons enough for her,No weapon large enough but all the Air;Men felt the heatwithin him rage,And hop’d the Air would it asswage,Call’d for its help, but th’ Air did them deceive,And aggravate the ills it should relieve.The Air no more was Vital now,But did a mortal poyson grow;The Lungs which us’d to fann the heart,Onely now serv’d to fire each part,What should refresh, increas’d the smart,And now their very breath,The chiefest sign of life, turn’d the cause of death.
Now Death began her sword to whet,
Not all theCyclopssweat,
NorVulcausmighty Anvils could prepare
Weapons enough for her,
No weapon large enough but all the Air;
Men felt the heatwithin him rage,
And hop’d the Air would it asswage,
Call’d for its help, but th’ Air did them deceive,
And aggravate the ills it should relieve.
The Air no more was Vital now,
But did a mortal poyson grow;
The Lungs which us’d to fann the heart,
Onely now serv’d to fire each part,
What should refresh, increas’d the smart,
And now their very breath,
The chiefest sign of life, turn’d the cause of death.
XI.
Upon the Head first the disease,As a bold Conqueror doth seize,Begins with Mans Metropolis,Secur’d the Capitol, and then it knewIt could at pleasure weaker parts subdue.Blood started through each eye;The redness of that Skie,Fore-told a tempest nigh.The tongue did slow all oreWith clotted Filth and Gore;As doth a Lions when some innocent preyHe hath devoured and brought away:Hoarsness and sores the throat did fill,And stopt the passages of speech and life;No room was left for groans or grief;Too cruel and imperious ill!Which not content to kill,With tyrannous and dreadful pain,Dost take from men the very power to complain.
Upon the Head first the disease,As a bold Conqueror doth seize,Begins with Mans Metropolis,Secur’d the Capitol, and then it knewIt could at pleasure weaker parts subdue.Blood started through each eye;The redness of that Skie,Fore-told a tempest nigh.The tongue did slow all oreWith clotted Filth and Gore;As doth a Lions when some innocent preyHe hath devoured and brought away:Hoarsness and sores the throat did fill,And stopt the passages of speech and life;No room was left for groans or grief;Too cruel and imperious ill!Which not content to kill,With tyrannous and dreadful pain,Dost take from men the very power to complain.
Upon the Head first the disease,As a bold Conqueror doth seize,Begins with Mans Metropolis,Secur’d the Capitol, and then it knewIt could at pleasure weaker parts subdue.Blood started through each eye;The redness of that Skie,Fore-told a tempest nigh.The tongue did slow all oreWith clotted Filth and Gore;As doth a Lions when some innocent preyHe hath devoured and brought away:Hoarsness and sores the throat did fill,And stopt the passages of speech and life;No room was left for groans or grief;Too cruel and imperious ill!Which not content to kill,With tyrannous and dreadful pain,Dost take from men the very power to complain.
Upon the Head first the disease,
As a bold Conqueror doth seize,
Begins with Mans Metropolis,
Secur’d the Capitol, and then it knew
It could at pleasure weaker parts subdue.
Blood started through each eye;
The redness of that Skie,
Fore-told a tempest nigh.
The tongue did slow all ore
With clotted Filth and Gore;
As doth a Lions when some innocent prey
He hath devoured and brought away:
Hoarsness and sores the throat did fill,
And stopt the passages of speech and life;
No room was left for groans or grief;
Too cruel and imperious ill!
Which not content to kill,
With tyrannous and dreadful pain,
Dost take from men the very power to complain.
XII.
Then down it went into the breast,There are all the seats and shops of life possest,Such noisome smells from thence did come,As if the stomach were a tomb;No food would there abide,Or if it did, turn’d to the enemies side,The very meat new poysons to the Plague supply’d.Next to the heart the fires came,The heart did wonder what usurping flame,What unknown furnace shouldOn its more natural heat intrude,Strait call’d its spirits up, but found too well,It was too late now to rebell.The tainted blood its course began,And carried death where ere it ran,That which before was Natures noblest Art,The circulation from the heart,Was most destructful now,And Nature speedier did undoe,For that the sooner did impartThe poyson and the smart,The infectious blood to every distant part.
Then down it went into the breast,There are all the seats and shops of life possest,Such noisome smells from thence did come,As if the stomach were a tomb;No food would there abide,Or if it did, turn’d to the enemies side,The very meat new poysons to the Plague supply’d.Next to the heart the fires came,The heart did wonder what usurping flame,What unknown furnace shouldOn its more natural heat intrude,Strait call’d its spirits up, but found too well,It was too late now to rebell.The tainted blood its course began,And carried death where ere it ran,That which before was Natures noblest Art,The circulation from the heart,Was most destructful now,And Nature speedier did undoe,For that the sooner did impartThe poyson and the smart,The infectious blood to every distant part.
Then down it went into the breast,There are all the seats and shops of life possest,Such noisome smells from thence did come,As if the stomach were a tomb;No food would there abide,Or if it did, turn’d to the enemies side,The very meat new poysons to the Plague supply’d.Next to the heart the fires came,The heart did wonder what usurping flame,What unknown furnace shouldOn its more natural heat intrude,Strait call’d its spirits up, but found too well,It was too late now to rebell.The tainted blood its course began,And carried death where ere it ran,That which before was Natures noblest Art,The circulation from the heart,Was most destructful now,And Nature speedier did undoe,For that the sooner did impartThe poyson and the smart,The infectious blood to every distant part.
Then down it went into the breast,
There are all the seats and shops of life possest,
Such noisome smells from thence did come,
As if the stomach were a tomb;
No food would there abide,
Or if it did, turn’d to the enemies side,
The very meat new poysons to the Plague supply’d.
Next to the heart the fires came,
The heart did wonder what usurping flame,
What unknown furnace should
On its more natural heat intrude,
Strait call’d its spirits up, but found too well,
It was too late now to rebell.
The tainted blood its course began,
And carried death where ere it ran,
That which before was Natures noblest Art,
The circulation from the heart,
Was most destructful now,
And Nature speedier did undoe,
For that the sooner did impart
The poyson and the smart,
The infectious blood to every distant part.
XIII.
The belly felt at last its share,And all the subtil labyrinths thereOf winding bowels did new Monsters bear.Here seven dayes it rul’d and sway’d,And oftner kill’d because it death so long delay’d.But if through strength and heat of age,The body overcame its rage,The Plague departed, as the Devil doeth,When driven by prayers away he goeth.If Prayers and Heaven do him controul,And if he cannot have the soul,Himself out ofthe roof orwindow throws,And will not all his labour lose,But takes away with him part of the house:So here the vanquisht evil took from themWho conquer’d it, some part, some limb;Some lost the use of hands, or eyes,Some armes, some legs, some thighs,Some all their lives before forgot,Their mindes were but one darker blot;Those various pictures in the head,And all the numerous shapes were fled;And now the ransackt memoryLanguish’d in naked poverty,Had lost its mighty treasury;They past theLetheLake, although they did not die.
The belly felt at last its share,And all the subtil labyrinths thereOf winding bowels did new Monsters bear.Here seven dayes it rul’d and sway’d,And oftner kill’d because it death so long delay’d.But if through strength and heat of age,The body overcame its rage,The Plague departed, as the Devil doeth,When driven by prayers away he goeth.If Prayers and Heaven do him controul,And if he cannot have the soul,Himself out ofthe roof orwindow throws,And will not all his labour lose,But takes away with him part of the house:So here the vanquisht evil took from themWho conquer’d it, some part, some limb;Some lost the use of hands, or eyes,Some armes, some legs, some thighs,Some all their lives before forgot,Their mindes were but one darker blot;Those various pictures in the head,And all the numerous shapes were fled;And now the ransackt memoryLanguish’d in naked poverty,Had lost its mighty treasury;They past theLetheLake, although they did not die.
The belly felt at last its share,And all the subtil labyrinths thereOf winding bowels did new Monsters bear.Here seven dayes it rul’d and sway’d,And oftner kill’d because it death so long delay’d.But if through strength and heat of age,The body overcame its rage,The Plague departed, as the Devil doeth,When driven by prayers away he goeth.If Prayers and Heaven do him controul,And if he cannot have the soul,Himself out ofthe roof orwindow throws,And will not all his labour lose,But takes away with him part of the house:So here the vanquisht evil took from themWho conquer’d it, some part, some limb;Some lost the use of hands, or eyes,Some armes, some legs, some thighs,Some all their lives before forgot,Their mindes were but one darker blot;Those various pictures in the head,And all the numerous shapes were fled;And now the ransackt memoryLanguish’d in naked poverty,Had lost its mighty treasury;They past theLetheLake, although they did not die.
The belly felt at last its share,
And all the subtil labyrinths there
Of winding bowels did new Monsters bear.
Here seven dayes it rul’d and sway’d,
And oftner kill’d because it death so long delay’d.
But if through strength and heat of age,
The body overcame its rage,
The Plague departed, as the Devil doeth,
When driven by prayers away he goeth.
If Prayers and Heaven do him controul,
And if he cannot have the soul,
Himself out ofthe roof orwindow throws,
And will not all his labour lose,
But takes away with him part of the house:
So here the vanquisht evil took from them
Who conquer’d it, some part, some limb;
Some lost the use of hands, or eyes,
Some armes, some legs, some thighs,
Some all their lives before forgot,
Their mindes were but one darker blot;
Those various pictures in the head,
And all the numerous shapes were fled;
And now the ransackt memory
Languish’d in naked poverty,
Had lost its mighty treasury;
They past theLetheLake, although they did not die.
XIV.
Whatever lesser Maladies men had,They all gave place and vanished;Those petty tyrants fled,And at this mighty Conqueror shrunk their head.Feavers, Agues, Palsies, Stone,Gout, Cholick, and Consumption,And all the milder Generation,By which Man-kind is by degrees undone,Quickly were rooted out and gone;Men saw themselves freed from the pain,Rejoyc’d, but all alas, in vain,’Twas an unhappy remedie,Which cur’d himthat they might both worse and sooner die.
Whatever lesser Maladies men had,They all gave place and vanished;Those petty tyrants fled,And at this mighty Conqueror shrunk their head.Feavers, Agues, Palsies, Stone,Gout, Cholick, and Consumption,And all the milder Generation,By which Man-kind is by degrees undone,Quickly were rooted out and gone;Men saw themselves freed from the pain,Rejoyc’d, but all alas, in vain,’Twas an unhappy remedie,Which cur’d himthat they might both worse and sooner die.
Whatever lesser Maladies men had,They all gave place and vanished;Those petty tyrants fled,And at this mighty Conqueror shrunk their head.Feavers, Agues, Palsies, Stone,Gout, Cholick, and Consumption,And all the milder Generation,By which Man-kind is by degrees undone,Quickly were rooted out and gone;Men saw themselves freed from the pain,Rejoyc’d, but all alas, in vain,’Twas an unhappy remedie,Which cur’d himthat they might both worse and sooner die.
Whatever lesser Maladies men had,
They all gave place and vanished;
Those petty tyrants fled,
And at this mighty Conqueror shrunk their head.
Feavers, Agues, Palsies, Stone,
Gout, Cholick, and Consumption,
And all the milder Generation,
By which Man-kind is by degrees undone,
Quickly were rooted out and gone;
Men saw themselves freed from the pain,
Rejoyc’d, but all alas, in vain,
’Twas an unhappy remedie,
Which cur’d himthat they might both worse and sooner die.
XV.
Physicians now could nought prevail,They the first spoils to the proud Victor fall,Nor would the Plague their knowledge trust,But feared their skill, and therefore slew them first:So Tyrants when they would confirm their yoke,First make the chiefest men to feel the stroke,The chiefest and the wisest heads, least theyShould soonest disobey,Should first rebell, and others learn from them the way.No aid of herbs, or juyces power,None ofApollo’sart could cure,But helpt the Plague the speedier to devour.Physick it self was a disease,Physick the fatal tortures did increase,Prescriptions did the pains renew,AndÆsculapiusto the sick did come,As afterwards toRome,In form of Serpent, brought new poysons with him too.
Physicians now could nought prevail,They the first spoils to the proud Victor fall,Nor would the Plague their knowledge trust,But feared their skill, and therefore slew them first:So Tyrants when they would confirm their yoke,First make the chiefest men to feel the stroke,The chiefest and the wisest heads, least theyShould soonest disobey,Should first rebell, and others learn from them the way.No aid of herbs, or juyces power,None ofApollo’sart could cure,But helpt the Plague the speedier to devour.Physick it self was a disease,Physick the fatal tortures did increase,Prescriptions did the pains renew,AndÆsculapiusto the sick did come,As afterwards toRome,In form of Serpent, brought new poysons with him too.
Physicians now could nought prevail,They the first spoils to the proud Victor fall,Nor would the Plague their knowledge trust,But feared their skill, and therefore slew them first:So Tyrants when they would confirm their yoke,First make the chiefest men to feel the stroke,The chiefest and the wisest heads, least theyShould soonest disobey,Should first rebell, and others learn from them the way.No aid of herbs, or juyces power,None ofApollo’sart could cure,But helpt the Plague the speedier to devour.Physick it self was a disease,Physick the fatal tortures did increase,Prescriptions did the pains renew,AndÆsculapiusto the sick did come,As afterwards toRome,In form of Serpent, brought new poysons with him too.
Physicians now could nought prevail,
They the first spoils to the proud Victor fall,
Nor would the Plague their knowledge trust,
But feared their skill, and therefore slew them first:
So Tyrants when they would confirm their yoke,
First make the chiefest men to feel the stroke,
The chiefest and the wisest heads, least they
Should soonest disobey,
Should first rebell, and others learn from them the way.
No aid of herbs, or juyces power,
None ofApollo’sart could cure,
But helpt the Plague the speedier to devour.
Physick it self was a disease,
Physick the fatal tortures did increase,
Prescriptions did the pains renew,
AndÆsculapiusto the sick did come,
As afterwards toRome,
In form of Serpent, brought new poysons with him too.
XVI.
The streams did wonder, that so soonAs they were from their Native mountains gone,They saw themselves drunk up, and fearAnotherXerxesArmy near.Some cast into the Pit the Urn,And drink it dry at its return;Again they drew, again they drank;At first the coolness of the stream did thank,But strait the more were scorch’d, the more did burn;And drunk with water in their drinking sank:That Urn which now to quench their thirst they use,Shortly their Ashes shall inclose.Others into the Chrystal brook,With faint and wondring eyes did look,Saw what a ghastly shape themselves had took,Away they would have fled, but them their leggs forsook.Some snach’d the waters up,Their hands, their mouths the cup;They drunk, and found they flam’d the more,And onely added to the burning store.So have I seen on Lime cold water thrown,Strait all was to a Ferment grown,And hidden seeds of fire together run:The heap was calm, and temperate before,Such as the Finger could indure;But when the moistures it provoke,Did rage, did swell, did smoke,Did move, and flame, and burn, and strait to ashes broke.
The streams did wonder, that so soonAs they were from their Native mountains gone,They saw themselves drunk up, and fearAnotherXerxesArmy near.Some cast into the Pit the Urn,And drink it dry at its return;Again they drew, again they drank;At first the coolness of the stream did thank,But strait the more were scorch’d, the more did burn;And drunk with water in their drinking sank:That Urn which now to quench their thirst they use,Shortly their Ashes shall inclose.Others into the Chrystal brook,With faint and wondring eyes did look,Saw what a ghastly shape themselves had took,Away they would have fled, but them their leggs forsook.Some snach’d the waters up,Their hands, their mouths the cup;They drunk, and found they flam’d the more,And onely added to the burning store.So have I seen on Lime cold water thrown,Strait all was to a Ferment grown,And hidden seeds of fire together run:The heap was calm, and temperate before,Such as the Finger could indure;But when the moistures it provoke,Did rage, did swell, did smoke,Did move, and flame, and burn, and strait to ashes broke.
The streams did wonder, that so soonAs they were from their Native mountains gone,They saw themselves drunk up, and fearAnotherXerxesArmy near.Some cast into the Pit the Urn,And drink it dry at its return;Again they drew, again they drank;At first the coolness of the stream did thank,But strait the more were scorch’d, the more did burn;And drunk with water in their drinking sank:That Urn which now to quench their thirst they use,Shortly their Ashes shall inclose.Others into the Chrystal brook,With faint and wondring eyes did look,Saw what a ghastly shape themselves had took,Away they would have fled, but them their leggs forsook.Some snach’d the waters up,Their hands, their mouths the cup;They drunk, and found they flam’d the more,And onely added to the burning store.So have I seen on Lime cold water thrown,Strait all was to a Ferment grown,And hidden seeds of fire together run:The heap was calm, and temperate before,Such as the Finger could indure;But when the moistures it provoke,Did rage, did swell, did smoke,Did move, and flame, and burn, and strait to ashes broke.
The streams did wonder, that so soon
As they were from their Native mountains gone,
They saw themselves drunk up, and fear
AnotherXerxesArmy near.
Some cast into the Pit the Urn,
And drink it dry at its return;
Again they drew, again they drank;
At first the coolness of the stream did thank,
But strait the more were scorch’d, the more did burn;
And drunk with water in their drinking sank:
That Urn which now to quench their thirst they use,
Shortly their Ashes shall inclose.
Others into the Chrystal brook,
With faint and wondring eyes did look,
Saw what a ghastly shape themselves had took,
Away they would have fled, but them their leggs forsook.
Some snach’d the waters up,
Their hands, their mouths the cup;
They drunk, and found they flam’d the more,
And onely added to the burning store.
So have I seen on Lime cold water thrown,
Strait all was to a Ferment grown,
And hidden seeds of fire together run:
The heap was calm, and temperate before,
Such as the Finger could indure;
But when the moistures it provoke,
Did rage, did swell, did smoke,
Did move, and flame, and burn, and strait to ashes broke.
XVII.
So strong the heat, so strong the torments were,They like some mighty burden bearThe lightest covering of Air.All Sexes and all Ages do invadeThe bounds which Nature laid,The Laws of modesty which Nature made.The Virgins blush not, yet uncloath’d appear,Undress’d do run about, yet never fear.The pain and the disease did nowUnwillingly reduce men toThat nakedness once more,Which perfect health and innocence caus’d before.No sleep, no peace, no rest,Their wandring and affrighted minds possest;Upon their souls and eyes,Hell and Eternal horrour lies,Unusual shapes, and images,Dark pictures, and resemblancesOf things to come, and of the World below,O’re their distemper’d fancies goe:Sometimes they curse, sometimes they pray untoThe Gods above, the Gods beneath;Sometimes they cruelties, and fury breath,Not sleep, but waking now was sister unto death.
So strong the heat, so strong the torments were,They like some mighty burden bearThe lightest covering of Air.All Sexes and all Ages do invadeThe bounds which Nature laid,The Laws of modesty which Nature made.The Virgins blush not, yet uncloath’d appear,Undress’d do run about, yet never fear.The pain and the disease did nowUnwillingly reduce men toThat nakedness once more,Which perfect health and innocence caus’d before.No sleep, no peace, no rest,Their wandring and affrighted minds possest;Upon their souls and eyes,Hell and Eternal horrour lies,Unusual shapes, and images,Dark pictures, and resemblancesOf things to come, and of the World below,O’re their distemper’d fancies goe:Sometimes they curse, sometimes they pray untoThe Gods above, the Gods beneath;Sometimes they cruelties, and fury breath,Not sleep, but waking now was sister unto death.
So strong the heat, so strong the torments were,They like some mighty burden bearThe lightest covering of Air.All Sexes and all Ages do invadeThe bounds which Nature laid,The Laws of modesty which Nature made.The Virgins blush not, yet uncloath’d appear,Undress’d do run about, yet never fear.The pain and the disease did nowUnwillingly reduce men toThat nakedness once more,Which perfect health and innocence caus’d before.No sleep, no peace, no rest,Their wandring and affrighted minds possest;Upon their souls and eyes,Hell and Eternal horrour lies,Unusual shapes, and images,Dark pictures, and resemblancesOf things to come, and of the World below,O’re their distemper’d fancies goe:Sometimes they curse, sometimes they pray untoThe Gods above, the Gods beneath;Sometimes they cruelties, and fury breath,Not sleep, but waking now was sister unto death.
So strong the heat, so strong the torments were,
They like some mighty burden bear
The lightest covering of Air.
All Sexes and all Ages do invade
The bounds which Nature laid,
The Laws of modesty which Nature made.
The Virgins blush not, yet uncloath’d appear,
Undress’d do run about, yet never fear.
The pain and the disease did now
Unwillingly reduce men to
That nakedness once more,
Which perfect health and innocence caus’d before.
No sleep, no peace, no rest,
Their wandring and affrighted minds possest;
Upon their souls and eyes,
Hell and Eternal horrour lies,
Unusual shapes, and images,
Dark pictures, and resemblances
Of things to come, and of the World below,
O’re their distemper’d fancies goe:
Sometimes they curse, sometimes they pray unto
The Gods above, the Gods beneath;
Sometimes they cruelties, and fury breath,
Not sleep, but waking now was sister unto death.
XVIII.
Scattred in Fields the Bodies lay,The earth call’d to the Fowls to take their Flesh away.In vain she call’d, they come not nigh,Nor would their food with their own ruine buy,But at full meals, they hunger, pine, and die.The Vulters afar off did see the feast,Rejoyc’d, and call’d their friends to taste,They rallied up their troops in haste,Along came mighty droves,Forsook their young ones, and their groves,Each one his native mountain and his nest;They come, but all their carcases abhor,And now avoid the dead men moreThan weaker birds did living men before.But if some bolder fowls the flesh essay,They were destroy’d by their own prey.The Dog no longer bark’t at coming guest,Repents its being a domestick Beast,Did to the woods and mountains haste:The very Owls atAthensareBut seldome seen and rare,The Owls depart in open day,Rather than in infected Ivy more to stay.
Scattred in Fields the Bodies lay,The earth call’d to the Fowls to take their Flesh away.In vain she call’d, they come not nigh,Nor would their food with their own ruine buy,But at full meals, they hunger, pine, and die.The Vulters afar off did see the feast,Rejoyc’d, and call’d their friends to taste,They rallied up their troops in haste,Along came mighty droves,Forsook their young ones, and their groves,Each one his native mountain and his nest;They come, but all their carcases abhor,And now avoid the dead men moreThan weaker birds did living men before.But if some bolder fowls the flesh essay,They were destroy’d by their own prey.The Dog no longer bark’t at coming guest,Repents its being a domestick Beast,Did to the woods and mountains haste:The very Owls atAthensareBut seldome seen and rare,The Owls depart in open day,Rather than in infected Ivy more to stay.
Scattred in Fields the Bodies lay,The earth call’d to the Fowls to take their Flesh away.In vain she call’d, they come not nigh,Nor would their food with their own ruine buy,But at full meals, they hunger, pine, and die.The Vulters afar off did see the feast,Rejoyc’d, and call’d their friends to taste,They rallied up their troops in haste,Along came mighty droves,Forsook their young ones, and their groves,Each one his native mountain and his nest;They come, but all their carcases abhor,And now avoid the dead men moreThan weaker birds did living men before.But if some bolder fowls the flesh essay,They were destroy’d by their own prey.The Dog no longer bark’t at coming guest,Repents its being a domestick Beast,Did to the woods and mountains haste:The very Owls atAthensareBut seldome seen and rare,The Owls depart in open day,Rather than in infected Ivy more to stay.
Scattred in Fields the Bodies lay,
The earth call’d to the Fowls to take their Flesh away.
In vain she call’d, they come not nigh,
Nor would their food with their own ruine buy,
But at full meals, they hunger, pine, and die.
The Vulters afar off did see the feast,
Rejoyc’d, and call’d their friends to taste,
They rallied up their troops in haste,
Along came mighty droves,
Forsook their young ones, and their groves,
Each one his native mountain and his nest;
They come, but all their carcases abhor,
And now avoid the dead men more
Than weaker birds did living men before.
But if some bolder fowls the flesh essay,
They were destroy’d by their own prey.
The Dog no longer bark’t at coming guest,
Repents its being a domestick Beast,
Did to the woods and mountains haste:
The very Owls atAthensare
But seldome seen and rare,
The Owls depart in open day,
Rather than in infected Ivy more to stay.
XIX.
Mountains of bones and carcases,The street, the Market-place possess,Threatning to raise a newAcropolis.Here lies a mother and her child,The infant suck’d as yet, and smil’d,But strait by its own food was kill’d.There parents hugg’d their children last,Here parting lovers last embrac’d,But yet not parting neither,They both expir’d and went away together.Here pris’ners in the Dungeon die,And gain a two-fold liberty,They meet and thank their painsWhich them from double chainsOf body and of iron free.Here others poyson’d by the scentWhich from corrupted bodies went,Quickly return the death they did receive,And death to others give;Themselves now dead the air pollute the more,For which they others curs’d before,Their bodies kill all that come near,And even after death they all are murderers here.
Mountains of bones and carcases,The street, the Market-place possess,Threatning to raise a newAcropolis.Here lies a mother and her child,The infant suck’d as yet, and smil’d,But strait by its own food was kill’d.There parents hugg’d their children last,Here parting lovers last embrac’d,But yet not parting neither,They both expir’d and went away together.Here pris’ners in the Dungeon die,And gain a two-fold liberty,They meet and thank their painsWhich them from double chainsOf body and of iron free.Here others poyson’d by the scentWhich from corrupted bodies went,Quickly return the death they did receive,And death to others give;Themselves now dead the air pollute the more,For which they others curs’d before,Their bodies kill all that come near,And even after death they all are murderers here.
Mountains of bones and carcases,The street, the Market-place possess,Threatning to raise a newAcropolis.Here lies a mother and her child,The infant suck’d as yet, and smil’d,But strait by its own food was kill’d.There parents hugg’d their children last,Here parting lovers last embrac’d,But yet not parting neither,They both expir’d and went away together.Here pris’ners in the Dungeon die,And gain a two-fold liberty,They meet and thank their painsWhich them from double chainsOf body and of iron free.Here others poyson’d by the scentWhich from corrupted bodies went,Quickly return the death they did receive,And death to others give;Themselves now dead the air pollute the more,For which they others curs’d before,Their bodies kill all that come near,And even after death they all are murderers here.
Mountains of bones and carcases,
The street, the Market-place possess,
Threatning to raise a newAcropolis.
Here lies a mother and her child,
The infant suck’d as yet, and smil’d,
But strait by its own food was kill’d.
There parents hugg’d their children last,
Here parting lovers last embrac’d,
But yet not parting neither,
They both expir’d and went away together.
Here pris’ners in the Dungeon die,
And gain a two-fold liberty,
They meet and thank their pains
Which them from double chains
Of body and of iron free.
Here others poyson’d by the scent
Which from corrupted bodies went,
Quickly return the death they did receive,
And death to others give;
Themselves now dead the air pollute the more,
For which they others curs’d before,
Their bodies kill all that come near,
And even after death they all are murderers here.
XX.
The friend doth hear his friends last cries,Parteth his grief for him, and dies,Lives not enough to close his eyes.The father at his deathSpeaks his son heir with an infectious breath;In the same hour the son doth takeHis fathers will, and his own make.The servant needs not here be slain,To serve his master in the other world again;They languishing together lie,Their souls away together flie;The husband gasp’th and his wife lies by,It must be her turn next to die,The husband and the wifeToo truly now are one, and live one life.That couple which the Gods did entertain,Had made their prayer here in vain;No fates in death could then divide,They must without their priviledge together both have dy’d.
The friend doth hear his friends last cries,Parteth his grief for him, and dies,Lives not enough to close his eyes.The father at his deathSpeaks his son heir with an infectious breath;In the same hour the son doth takeHis fathers will, and his own make.The servant needs not here be slain,To serve his master in the other world again;They languishing together lie,Their souls away together flie;The husband gasp’th and his wife lies by,It must be her turn next to die,The husband and the wifeToo truly now are one, and live one life.That couple which the Gods did entertain,Had made their prayer here in vain;No fates in death could then divide,They must without their priviledge together both have dy’d.
The friend doth hear his friends last cries,Parteth his grief for him, and dies,Lives not enough to close his eyes.The father at his deathSpeaks his son heir with an infectious breath;In the same hour the son doth takeHis fathers will, and his own make.The servant needs not here be slain,To serve his master in the other world again;They languishing together lie,Their souls away together flie;The husband gasp’th and his wife lies by,It must be her turn next to die,The husband and the wifeToo truly now are one, and live one life.That couple which the Gods did entertain,Had made their prayer here in vain;No fates in death could then divide,They must without their priviledge together both have dy’d.
The friend doth hear his friends last cries,
Parteth his grief for him, and dies,
Lives not enough to close his eyes.
The father at his death
Speaks his son heir with an infectious breath;
In the same hour the son doth take
His fathers will, and his own make.
The servant needs not here be slain,
To serve his master in the other world again;
They languishing together lie,
Their souls away together flie;
The husband gasp’th and his wife lies by,
It must be her turn next to die,
The husband and the wife
Too truly now are one, and live one life.
That couple which the Gods did entertain,
Had made their prayer here in vain;
No fates in death could then divide,
They must without their priviledge together both have dy’d.
XXI.
There was no number now of death,The sisters scarce stood still themselves to breath:The sisters now quite weariedIn cutting single thred,Began at once to part whole looms,One stroak did give whole houses dooms;Now dy’d the frosty hairs,The Aged and decrepid years,They fell, and onely beg’d of Fate,Some few months more, but ’twas alas too late.Then Death, as if asham’d of that,A Conquest so degenerate,Cut off the young and lusty too;The young were reck’ning oreWhat happy dayes, what joyes they had in store;But Fate, e’re they had finish’d their account, them slew.The wretched Usurer dyed,And had no time to tell where he his treasures hid.The Merchant did beholdHis Ships return with Spice and Gold,He saw’t, and turn’d aside his head,Nor thank’d the Gods, but fell amidst his riches dead.
There was no number now of death,The sisters scarce stood still themselves to breath:The sisters now quite weariedIn cutting single thred,Began at once to part whole looms,One stroak did give whole houses dooms;Now dy’d the frosty hairs,The Aged and decrepid years,They fell, and onely beg’d of Fate,Some few months more, but ’twas alas too late.Then Death, as if asham’d of that,A Conquest so degenerate,Cut off the young and lusty too;The young were reck’ning oreWhat happy dayes, what joyes they had in store;But Fate, e’re they had finish’d their account, them slew.The wretched Usurer dyed,And had no time to tell where he his treasures hid.The Merchant did beholdHis Ships return with Spice and Gold,He saw’t, and turn’d aside his head,Nor thank’d the Gods, but fell amidst his riches dead.
There was no number now of death,The sisters scarce stood still themselves to breath:The sisters now quite weariedIn cutting single thred,Began at once to part whole looms,One stroak did give whole houses dooms;Now dy’d the frosty hairs,The Aged and decrepid years,They fell, and onely beg’d of Fate,Some few months more, but ’twas alas too late.Then Death, as if asham’d of that,A Conquest so degenerate,Cut off the young and lusty too;The young were reck’ning oreWhat happy dayes, what joyes they had in store;But Fate, e’re they had finish’d their account, them slew.The wretched Usurer dyed,And had no time to tell where he his treasures hid.The Merchant did beholdHis Ships return with Spice and Gold,He saw’t, and turn’d aside his head,Nor thank’d the Gods, but fell amidst his riches dead.
There was no number now of death,
The sisters scarce stood still themselves to breath:
The sisters now quite wearied
In cutting single thred,
Began at once to part whole looms,
One stroak did give whole houses dooms;
Now dy’d the frosty hairs,
The Aged and decrepid years,
They fell, and onely beg’d of Fate,
Some few months more, but ’twas alas too late.
Then Death, as if asham’d of that,
A Conquest so degenerate,
Cut off the young and lusty too;
The young were reck’ning ore
What happy dayes, what joyes they had in store;
But Fate, e’re they had finish’d their account, them slew.
The wretched Usurer dyed,
And had no time to tell where he his treasures hid.
The Merchant did behold
His Ships return with Spice and Gold,
He saw’t, and turn’d aside his head,
Nor thank’d the Gods, but fell amidst his riches dead.
XXII.
The Meetings and Assemblies cease, no moreThe people throng about the Orator.No course of Justice did appear,No noise of Lawyers fill’d the ear,The Senate cast awayThe Robe of Honour, and obeyDeaths more resistless sway,Whilest that with Dictatorian powerDoth all the great and lesser Officers devour.No Magistrates did walk about;No Purple aw’d the rout,The common people tooA Purple of their own did shew;And all their Bodies o’re,The ruling colours bore,No Judge, no Legislators sitSince this newDracocame,And harsher Laws did frame,Laws that like his in blood are writ.The Benches and the Pleading-place they leave,About the streets they run and rave:The madness which GreatSolondid of lateBut counterfeitFor the advantage of the State,Now his successors do too truly imitate.
The Meetings and Assemblies cease, no moreThe people throng about the Orator.No course of Justice did appear,No noise of Lawyers fill’d the ear,The Senate cast awayThe Robe of Honour, and obeyDeaths more resistless sway,Whilest that with Dictatorian powerDoth all the great and lesser Officers devour.No Magistrates did walk about;No Purple aw’d the rout,The common people tooA Purple of their own did shew;And all their Bodies o’re,The ruling colours bore,No Judge, no Legislators sitSince this newDracocame,And harsher Laws did frame,Laws that like his in blood are writ.The Benches and the Pleading-place they leave,About the streets they run and rave:The madness which GreatSolondid of lateBut counterfeitFor the advantage of the State,Now his successors do too truly imitate.
The Meetings and Assemblies cease, no moreThe people throng about the Orator.No course of Justice did appear,No noise of Lawyers fill’d the ear,The Senate cast awayThe Robe of Honour, and obeyDeaths more resistless sway,Whilest that with Dictatorian powerDoth all the great and lesser Officers devour.No Magistrates did walk about;No Purple aw’d the rout,The common people tooA Purple of their own did shew;And all their Bodies o’re,The ruling colours bore,No Judge, no Legislators sitSince this newDracocame,And harsher Laws did frame,Laws that like his in blood are writ.The Benches and the Pleading-place they leave,About the streets they run and rave:The madness which GreatSolondid of lateBut counterfeitFor the advantage of the State,Now his successors do too truly imitate.
The Meetings and Assemblies cease, no more
The people throng about the Orator.
No course of Justice did appear,
No noise of Lawyers fill’d the ear,
The Senate cast away
The Robe of Honour, and obey
Deaths more resistless sway,
Whilest that with Dictatorian power
Doth all the great and lesser Officers devour.
No Magistrates did walk about;
No Purple aw’d the rout,
The common people too
A Purple of their own did shew;
And all their Bodies o’re,
The ruling colours bore,
No Judge, no Legislators sit
Since this newDracocame,
And harsher Laws did frame,
Laws that like his in blood are writ.
The Benches and the Pleading-place they leave,
About the streets they run and rave:
The madness which GreatSolondid of late
But counterfeit
For the advantage of the State,
Now his successors do too truly imitate.
XXIII.
Up starts the Souldier from his bed,He though Deaths servant is not freed,Death him cashier’d, ’cause now his help she did not need.He that ne’re knew before to yield,Or to give back, or lead the Field,Would fain now from himself have fled.He snatch’d his sword now rusted o’re,Dreadful and sparkling now no more,And thus in open streets did roar:How have I death so ill deserv’d of thee,That now thy self thou shouldst revenge on me?HaveIso many lives on thee bestow’d?Have I the earth so often dy’d in blood?Have I to flatter thee so many slain?And mustInow thy prey remain?Let me at least, ifImust dye,Meet in the Field some gallant enemy.Send Gods thePersiantroops again;No they’re a base and a degenerate train;They by our Women may be slain.Give me great Heavens some manful foes.Let me my death amidst some valiantGrecianschoose,Let me survive to die atSyracuse,Where my dear Countrey shall her Glory loseFor you Great Gods! into my dying mind infuse,What miseries, what doomMust on myAthensshortly come:My thoughts inspir’d presage,Slaughters and Battels to the coming Age;Oh! mightIdie upon that glorious stage:Oh that! but then he grasp’d his sword, & death concludeshis rage.
Up starts the Souldier from his bed,He though Deaths servant is not freed,Death him cashier’d, ’cause now his help she did not need.He that ne’re knew before to yield,Or to give back, or lead the Field,Would fain now from himself have fled.He snatch’d his sword now rusted o’re,Dreadful and sparkling now no more,And thus in open streets did roar:How have I death so ill deserv’d of thee,That now thy self thou shouldst revenge on me?HaveIso many lives on thee bestow’d?Have I the earth so often dy’d in blood?Have I to flatter thee so many slain?And mustInow thy prey remain?Let me at least, ifImust dye,Meet in the Field some gallant enemy.Send Gods thePersiantroops again;No they’re a base and a degenerate train;They by our Women may be slain.Give me great Heavens some manful foes.Let me my death amidst some valiantGrecianschoose,Let me survive to die atSyracuse,Where my dear Countrey shall her Glory loseFor you Great Gods! into my dying mind infuse,What miseries, what doomMust on myAthensshortly come:My thoughts inspir’d presage,Slaughters and Battels to the coming Age;Oh! mightIdie upon that glorious stage:Oh that! but then he grasp’d his sword, & death concludeshis rage.
Up starts the Souldier from his bed,He though Deaths servant is not freed,Death him cashier’d, ’cause now his help she did not need.He that ne’re knew before to yield,Or to give back, or lead the Field,Would fain now from himself have fled.He snatch’d his sword now rusted o’re,Dreadful and sparkling now no more,And thus in open streets did roar:How have I death so ill deserv’d of thee,That now thy self thou shouldst revenge on me?HaveIso many lives on thee bestow’d?Have I the earth so often dy’d in blood?Have I to flatter thee so many slain?And mustInow thy prey remain?Let me at least, ifImust dye,Meet in the Field some gallant enemy.Send Gods thePersiantroops again;No they’re a base and a degenerate train;They by our Women may be slain.Give me great Heavens some manful foes.Let me my death amidst some valiantGrecianschoose,Let me survive to die atSyracuse,Where my dear Countrey shall her Glory loseFor you Great Gods! into my dying mind infuse,What miseries, what doomMust on myAthensshortly come:My thoughts inspir’d presage,Slaughters and Battels to the coming Age;Oh! mightIdie upon that glorious stage:Oh that! but then he grasp’d his sword, & death concludeshis rage.
Up starts the Souldier from his bed,
He though Deaths servant is not freed,
Death him cashier’d, ’cause now his help she did not need.
He that ne’re knew before to yield,
Or to give back, or lead the Field,
Would fain now from himself have fled.
He snatch’d his sword now rusted o’re,
Dreadful and sparkling now no more,
And thus in open streets did roar:
How have I death so ill deserv’d of thee,
That now thy self thou shouldst revenge on me?
HaveIso many lives on thee bestow’d?
Have I the earth so often dy’d in blood?
Have I to flatter thee so many slain?
And mustInow thy prey remain?
Let me at least, ifImust dye,
Meet in the Field some gallant enemy.
Send Gods thePersiantroops again;
No they’re a base and a degenerate train;
They by our Women may be slain.
Give me great Heavens some manful foes.
Let me my death amidst some valiantGrecianschoose,
Let me survive to die atSyracuse,
Where my dear Countrey shall her Glory lose
For you Great Gods! into my dying mind infuse,
What miseries, what doom
Must on myAthensshortly come:
My thoughts inspir’d presage,
Slaughters and Battels to the coming Age;
Oh! mightIdie upon that glorious stage:
Oh that! but then he grasp’d his sword, & death concludeshis rage.
XXIV.
Draw back, draw back thy sword, O Fate!Lest thou repent when ’tis too late,Lest by thy making now so great a waste,By spending all Man-kind upon one feast,Thou sterve thy self at last:What men wilt thou reserve in store,Whom in the time to come thou mayst devour,When thou shalt have destroyed all before.But if thou wilt not yet give o’re,If yet thy greedie Stomach calls for more,If more remain whom thou must kill,And if thy jawes are craving still,Carry thy fury to theScythiancoasts,The Northern wildness, and eternal frosts!Against those barbrous crouds thy arrows whet,Where Arts and Laws are strangers yet;Where thou may’st kill, and yet the loss will not be great,There rage, there spread, and there infect the Air,Murder whole towns and families there,Thy worst against those Savage nations dare,Those whom Man-kind can spare,Those whom man-kind it self doth fear;Amidst that dreadful night, and fatal cold,There thou may’st walk unseen, and bold,There let thy Flames their Empire hold.Unto the farthest Seas, and Natures ends,Where never Summer Sun its beams extends,Carry thy plagues, thy pains, thy heats;Thy raging fires, thy tortering sweats,Where never ray, or heat did come,They will rejoyce at such a doom,They’l bless thy Pestilential fire,Though by it they expire,They’l thank the very Flames with which they do consume.
Draw back, draw back thy sword, O Fate!Lest thou repent when ’tis too late,Lest by thy making now so great a waste,By spending all Man-kind upon one feast,Thou sterve thy self at last:What men wilt thou reserve in store,Whom in the time to come thou mayst devour,When thou shalt have destroyed all before.But if thou wilt not yet give o’re,If yet thy greedie Stomach calls for more,If more remain whom thou must kill,And if thy jawes are craving still,Carry thy fury to theScythiancoasts,The Northern wildness, and eternal frosts!Against those barbrous crouds thy arrows whet,Where Arts and Laws are strangers yet;Where thou may’st kill, and yet the loss will not be great,There rage, there spread, and there infect the Air,Murder whole towns and families there,Thy worst against those Savage nations dare,Those whom Man-kind can spare,Those whom man-kind it self doth fear;Amidst that dreadful night, and fatal cold,There thou may’st walk unseen, and bold,There let thy Flames their Empire hold.Unto the farthest Seas, and Natures ends,Where never Summer Sun its beams extends,Carry thy plagues, thy pains, thy heats;Thy raging fires, thy tortering sweats,Where never ray, or heat did come,They will rejoyce at such a doom,They’l bless thy Pestilential fire,Though by it they expire,They’l thank the very Flames with which they do consume.
Draw back, draw back thy sword, O Fate!Lest thou repent when ’tis too late,Lest by thy making now so great a waste,By spending all Man-kind upon one feast,Thou sterve thy self at last:What men wilt thou reserve in store,Whom in the time to come thou mayst devour,When thou shalt have destroyed all before.But if thou wilt not yet give o’re,If yet thy greedie Stomach calls for more,If more remain whom thou must kill,And if thy jawes are craving still,Carry thy fury to theScythiancoasts,The Northern wildness, and eternal frosts!Against those barbrous crouds thy arrows whet,Where Arts and Laws are strangers yet;Where thou may’st kill, and yet the loss will not be great,There rage, there spread, and there infect the Air,Murder whole towns and families there,Thy worst against those Savage nations dare,Those whom Man-kind can spare,Those whom man-kind it self doth fear;Amidst that dreadful night, and fatal cold,There thou may’st walk unseen, and bold,There let thy Flames their Empire hold.Unto the farthest Seas, and Natures ends,Where never Summer Sun its beams extends,Carry thy plagues, thy pains, thy heats;Thy raging fires, thy tortering sweats,Where never ray, or heat did come,They will rejoyce at such a doom,They’l bless thy Pestilential fire,Though by it they expire,They’l thank the very Flames with which they do consume.
Draw back, draw back thy sword, O Fate!
Lest thou repent when ’tis too late,
Lest by thy making now so great a waste,
By spending all Man-kind upon one feast,
Thou sterve thy self at last:
What men wilt thou reserve in store,
Whom in the time to come thou mayst devour,
When thou shalt have destroyed all before.
But if thou wilt not yet give o’re,
If yet thy greedie Stomach calls for more,
If more remain whom thou must kill,
And if thy jawes are craving still,
Carry thy fury to theScythiancoasts,
The Northern wildness, and eternal frosts!
Against those barbrous crouds thy arrows whet,
Where Arts and Laws are strangers yet;
Where thou may’st kill, and yet the loss will not be great,
There rage, there spread, and there infect the Air,
Murder whole towns and families there,
Thy worst against those Savage nations dare,
Those whom Man-kind can spare,
Those whom man-kind it self doth fear;
Amidst that dreadful night, and fatal cold,
There thou may’st walk unseen, and bold,
There let thy Flames their Empire hold.
Unto the farthest Seas, and Natures ends,
Where never Summer Sun its beams extends,
Carry thy plagues, thy pains, thy heats;
Thy raging fires, thy tortering sweats,
Where never ray, or heat did come,
They will rejoyce at such a doom,
They’l bless thy Pestilential fire,
Though by it they expire,
They’l thank the very Flames with which they do consume.
XXV.
Then if that banquet will not thee suffice,Seek out new Lands where thou maist tyrannize;Search every forrest, every hill,And all that in the hollow mountains dwell;Those wild and untame troops devour,Thereby thou wilt the rest of men secure,And that the rest of men will thank thee for.Let all those humane beasts be slain,Till scarce their memory remain;Thy self with that ignoble slaughter fill,’Twill be permitted thee that blood to spill.Measure the ruder world throughout,March all the Ocean shores about,Only pass by and spare theBritish Isle.Go on, and (whatColumbusonce shall do,When daies and time unto their ripeness grow)Find out new lands, and unknown countries too.Attempt those lands which yet are hidFrom all Mortalitie beside:There thou maist deal a victory,And none of this world hear the cryOf those that by thy wounds shall die;NoGreekshall know thy cruelty,And tell it to posterity.Go, and unpeople all those mighty Lands,Destroy with unrelenting hands;Go, and theSpaniardssword prevent,Go, make theSpaniardinnocent,Go, and root outall man-kindthere.That when theEuropæanArmies shall appear,Their sin may be the less,They may find all a wilderness,And without blood the gold and silver there possess.
Then if that banquet will not thee suffice,Seek out new Lands where thou maist tyrannize;Search every forrest, every hill,And all that in the hollow mountains dwell;Those wild and untame troops devour,Thereby thou wilt the rest of men secure,And that the rest of men will thank thee for.Let all those humane beasts be slain,Till scarce their memory remain;Thy self with that ignoble slaughter fill,’Twill be permitted thee that blood to spill.Measure the ruder world throughout,March all the Ocean shores about,Only pass by and spare theBritish Isle.Go on, and (whatColumbusonce shall do,When daies and time unto their ripeness grow)Find out new lands, and unknown countries too.Attempt those lands which yet are hidFrom all Mortalitie beside:There thou maist deal a victory,And none of this world hear the cryOf those that by thy wounds shall die;NoGreekshall know thy cruelty,And tell it to posterity.Go, and unpeople all those mighty Lands,Destroy with unrelenting hands;Go, and theSpaniardssword prevent,Go, make theSpaniardinnocent,Go, and root outall man-kindthere.That when theEuropæanArmies shall appear,Their sin may be the less,They may find all a wilderness,And without blood the gold and silver there possess.
Then if that banquet will not thee suffice,Seek out new Lands where thou maist tyrannize;Search every forrest, every hill,And all that in the hollow mountains dwell;Those wild and untame troops devour,Thereby thou wilt the rest of men secure,And that the rest of men will thank thee for.Let all those humane beasts be slain,Till scarce their memory remain;Thy self with that ignoble slaughter fill,’Twill be permitted thee that blood to spill.Measure the ruder world throughout,March all the Ocean shores about,Only pass by and spare theBritish Isle.Go on, and (whatColumbusonce shall do,When daies and time unto their ripeness grow)Find out new lands, and unknown countries too.Attempt those lands which yet are hidFrom all Mortalitie beside:There thou maist deal a victory,And none of this world hear the cryOf those that by thy wounds shall die;NoGreekshall know thy cruelty,And tell it to posterity.Go, and unpeople all those mighty Lands,Destroy with unrelenting hands;Go, and theSpaniardssword prevent,Go, make theSpaniardinnocent,Go, and root outall man-kindthere.That when theEuropæanArmies shall appear,Their sin may be the less,They may find all a wilderness,And without blood the gold and silver there possess.
Then if that banquet will not thee suffice,
Seek out new Lands where thou maist tyrannize;
Search every forrest, every hill,
And all that in the hollow mountains dwell;
Those wild and untame troops devour,
Thereby thou wilt the rest of men secure,
And that the rest of men will thank thee for.
Let all those humane beasts be slain,
Till scarce their memory remain;
Thy self with that ignoble slaughter fill,
’Twill be permitted thee that blood to spill.
Measure the ruder world throughout,
March all the Ocean shores about,
Only pass by and spare theBritish Isle.
Go on, and (whatColumbusonce shall do,
When daies and time unto their ripeness grow)
Find out new lands, and unknown countries too.
Attempt those lands which yet are hid
From all Mortalitie beside:
There thou maist deal a victory,
And none of this world hear the cry
Of those that by thy wounds shall die;
NoGreekshall know thy cruelty,
And tell it to posterity.
Go, and unpeople all those mighty Lands,
Destroy with unrelenting hands;
Go, and theSpaniardssword prevent,
Go, make theSpaniardinnocent,
Go, and root outall man-kindthere.
That when theEuropæanArmies shall appear,
Their sin may be the less,
They may find all a wilderness,
And without blood the gold and silver there possess.
XXVI.