網頁圖片
PDF
ePub 版

If one vast void eternal held its place,
Whence started time? or whence expanded space!
What gave the flumbering mass to feel a change?
Or bid confenting worlds harmonious range!
Could nothing link the universal chain?
No, 'tis impoffible, abfurd and vain!
Here reafon its eternal author finds,

}

The whole who regulates, unites, and binds,
Enlivens matter, and produces minds!
Inactive chaos fleeps in dull repose,
Nor knowledge thence, nor free volition flows!
A nobler fource those powers etherial show,
By which we think, defign, reflect, and know;
These from a cause fuperior date their rife,
"Abstract in effence from material ties."
An origin immortal, as fupreme,

From whose pure day, celeftial rays! they came :
In whom all poffible perfections shine,
Eternal, felf-exiftent, and divine!
From this great spring of uncreated might!
This all-refplendent orb of vital light!
Whence all created beings take their rife,
Which beautify the earth, or paint the skies!
Profufely-wide the boundless bleffings flow,
Which heaven enrich, and gladden worlds below!
Which are no lefs, when properly defin'd,
Than emanations of th' eternal mind!
Hence triumphs truth beyond objection clear
(Let unbelief attend, and shrink with fear !)
A 2

That

That what for ever was-muft furely be
Beyond commencement, and from period free;
Drawn from himself his native excellence,
His date eternal, and his fpace immense !
And all of whom that man can comprehend,
Is, that he ne'er begun, nor e'er shall end.
In him from whom existence boundless flows,
Let humble faith its facred trust repofe;
Affur'd, on his eternity depend,

"Eternal father! and eternal friend !”
Within that myftic circle safety seek,
No time can weaken, and no force can break ;
And, loft in adoration, breathe his praise,
High rock of ages, ancient fire of days!

[ocr errors]

II. UNITY.

Thus recogniz'd, the spring of life and thought! Eternal, felf-exiftant, un-begot!

Approach, celeftial mufe! th' empyreal throne,
And awfully adore th' exalted one!

In nature pure, in place fupremely free,
And happy in effential unity!

Bless'd in himself, had from his forming hand
No creatures sprung to hail his wide command ;
Blefs'd, had the facred fountain ne'er run o'er,
A boundless fea of blifs, that knows no shore !
Nor fenfe can two bright origins conceive,
Nor reafon two eternal Gods believe!

Could

[ocr errors]

Could the wild Manichæan own that guide,
The good would triumph, and the ill fubfide!
Again would vanquifh'd Arimanius bleed,

And darkness from prevailing light recede!
In different individuals we find,

An evident disparity of mind;

Hence ductile thought a thousand changes gains,
And actions vary as the will ordains;
But should two beings, equally fupreme,
Divided power, and parted empire claim;
How foon would univerfal order cease!
How foon would difcord harmony displace?
Eternal fchemes maintain eternal fight,
Nor yield, fupported by eternal might?
Where each would uncontrol'd his aim pursue,
The links diffever, or the chain renew;
Matter from motion cross impreffions take,
As ferv'd each power his rival's power to break,
While neutral chaos, from his deep recefs,
Would view the never-ending strife increase,
And blefs the conteft which fecur'd his peace!
Or new creations would oppofing rife,
With elemental war to blot the skies!

And round wild uproar and confusion hurl❜d,
Would veil the heavens, and waste the ruin'd world.
Two independent causes to admit,
Destroys religion, and debafes wit;

The first by fuch an anarchy undone,
The laft acknowledges its fource but one.

As from the main the mountain rills are drawn,
That wind irriguous thro' the flowery lawn;
So, mindful of their fpring, one course they keep,
Exploring, till they find their native deep!
Exalted power! invifible, fupreme,
Thou fovereign fole unutterable name!
As round thy throne thy flaming feraphs ftand,
And as they touch the lyre with trembling hand,
Too weak thy pure effulgence to behold,

With their rich plumes their dazzled eyes infold ;
Transported with the ardors of thy praise,
The holy holy! holy! anthem raise !
To them, refponfive, let creation fing,
Thee, indivifible eternal king!

III. SPIRITUALITY.

O fay, celeftial mufe! whose purer birth, Difdains the low material ties of earth

By what bright images fhall be defin'd
The myftic nature of th' eternal mind ?
Or how shall thought the dazzling height explore,
Where all that reafon can-is to adore!
That God's an immaterial effence pure,
Whom figure can't defcribe, nor parts immure;
Incapable of paffions, impulfe, fear,
In good pre-eminent, in truth fevere:
Unmix'd his nature, and fublim'd his powers,
From all the grofs allay which tempers ours;

In

In whofe clear eye the bright angelic train
Appear fuffus'd with imperfection's stain !
Impervious to the man's-or feraph's eye,
Beyond the ken of each, exalted high !
Him would in vain material semblance feign,
Or figur'd shrines the boundless God contain;
Object of faith!-he fhuns the view of fenfe,
Loft in the blaze of fightless excellence!
Moft perfect, moft intelligent, most wise,
In whom the fanctity of pureness lies;
In whose adjusting mind the whole is wrought,
Whose form is fpirit! and whose effence, thought!
Are truths infcrib'd by wifdom's brightest ray,
In characters that gild the face of day!
Reafon confefs'd (howe'er we may difpute)
Fix'd boundary! difcovers man from brute;
But dim to us, exerts its fainter ray,
Deprefs'd in matter, and allied to clay!
In forms fuperior kindles lefs confin'd,
Whose dress is æther, and whofe fubftance mind;
Yet all from him, fupreme of causes, flow,
To him their powers and their existence owe;
From the bright cherub of the noblest birth,
To the poor reasoning glow-worm plac'd on earth;
From matter then to spirit still ascend,
Thro' fpirit ftill refining, higher tend;
Purfue, on knowledge bent, the pathless road,
Pierce thro' infinitude in queft of God!
Still from thy fearch, the centre still shall fly,
Approaching ftill-thou never shalt come nigh!

« 上一頁繼續 »