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  • A STRAIN OF THE JUDGMENT OF THE LORD

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    4. A Strain of the Judgment of the Lord

    (Author Uncertain.)1

    Who will for me in fitting strain adapt

    Field-haunting muses? and with flowers will grace

    The spring-tide's rosy gales? And who will give

    The summer harvest's heavy stalks mature?

    5 And to the autumn's vines their swollen grapes?

    Or who in winter's honour will commend

    The olives, ever-peaceful? and will ope

    Waters renewed, even at their fountainheads?

    And cut from waving grass the leafy flowers?

    10 Forthwith the breezes of celestial light

    I will attune. Now be it granted me

    To meet the lightsome2 muses! to disclose

    The secret rivers on the fluvial top

    Of Helicon,3 and gladsome woods that grow

    15'Neath other star.4 And simultaneously

    I will attune in song the eternal flames;

    Whence the sea fluctuates with wave immense:

    What power5 moves the solid lands to quake;

    And whence the golden light first shot its rays

    20 On the new world; or who from gladsome clay

    Could man have moulded; whence in empty world6

    Our race could have upgrown; and what the greed

    Of living which each people so inspires;

    What things for ill created are; or what

    25 Death's propagation; whence have rosy wreaths

    Sweet smell and ruddy hue; what makes the vine

    Ferment in gladsome grapes away; and makes

    Full granaries by fruit of slender stalks distended be; or makes the tree grow ripe

    30 'Mid ice, with olives black; who gives to seeds

    Their increments of vigour various;

    And with her young's soft shadowings protects

    The mother. Good it is all things to know

    Which wondrous are in nature, that it may

    35 Be granted us to recognise through all

    The true Lord, who light, seas, sky, earth prepared,

    And decked with varied star the new-made world;7

    And first bade beasts and birds to issue forth;

    And gave the ocean's waters to be stocked

    40 With fish; and gathered in a mass the sands,

    With living creatures fertilized. Such strains

    With stately8 muses will I spin, and waves

    Healthful will from their fountainheads disclose:

    And may this strain of mine the gladsome shower

    45 Catch, which from placid clouds doth come, and flows

    Deeply and all unsought into men's souls,

    And guide it into our new-fumed lands

    In copious rills.9 Now come: if any one

    Still ignorant of God, and knowing naught

    50 Of life to come,10 would fain attain to touch

    The care-effacing living nymph, and through

    The swift waves' virtue his lost life repair,

    And'scape the penalties of flame eterne,11

    And rather win the guerdons of the life

    55 To come, let such remember God is One,

    Alone the object of our prayers; who 'neath

    His threshold hath the whole world poised; Himself

    Eternally abiding, and to be

    Alway for aye; holding the ages12 all;

    60 Alone, before all ages;13 unbegotten,

    Limitless God; who holds alone His seat

    Supernal; supereminent alone

    Above high heavens; omnipotent alone;

    Whom all things do obey; who for Himself

    65 Formed, when it pleased Him, man for aye; and gave

    Him to be pastor of beasts tame, and lord

    Of wild; who by a word14 could stretch forth heaven;

    And with a word could solid earth suspend;

    And quicklier than word15 had the seas wave

    70 Disjoined;16 and man's dear form with His own hands

    Did love to mould; and furthermore did will

    His own fair likeness17 to exist in him;

    And by His Spirit on his countenance

    The breath18 of life did breathe. Unmindful he

    75 Of God, such guilt rashly t' incur I Beyond

    The warning's range he was not ought to touch.19

    One fruit illicit, whence he was to know

    Forthwith how to discriminate alike

    Evil and equity, God him forbade

    80 To touch. What functions of the world20 did God

    Permit to man, and sealed the sweet sweet pledge

    Of His own love! and jurisdiction gave

    O'er birds, and granted him both deep and soil

    To tame, and mandates useful did impart

    85 Of dear salvation!'Neath his sway He gave

    The lands, the souls of flying things, the race

    Feathered, and every race, or tame or wild,

    Of beasts, and the sea's race, and monsterforms

    Shapeless of swimming things. But since so soon

    90 The primal man by primal crime transgressed

    The law, and left the mandates of the Lord

    (Led by a wife who counselled all the ills),

    By death he 'gan to perish. Woman 'twas

    Who sin's first ill committed, and (the law

    95 Transgressed) deceived her husband. Eve, induced

    By guile, the thresholds oped to death, and proved

    To her own self, with her whole race as well,

    A procreatrix of funereal woes.

    Hence unanticipated wickedness,

    100 Hence death, like seed, for aye, is scattered. Then

    More frequent grew atrocious deed; and toil

    More savage set the corrupt orb astir:

    (This lure the crafty serpent spread, inspired

    By envy's self:) then peoples more invent

    105 Practices of ill deeds; and by ill deeds

    Gave birth to seeds of wickedness.

    And so

    The only Lord. whose is the power supreme.

    Who o'er the heights the summits holds of heaven

    Supreme, and in exalted regions dwells

    110 In lofty light for ages, mindful too

    Of present time, and of futurity

    Prescient beforehand, keeps the progeny

    Of ill-desert, and all the souls which move

    By reason's force much-erring manf-nor less

    115 Their tardy bodies governs He-against

    The age decreed, so soon as, stretched in death,

    Men lay aside their ponderous limbs, and light

    As air, shall go, their earthly bonds undone,

    And take in diverse parts their proper spheres

    120 (But some He bids be forthwith by glad gales

    Recalled to life, and be in secret kept

    To wait the decreed law's awards, until

    Their bodies with resuscitated limbs

    Revive.21 ) Then shall men 'gin to weigh the awards

    125 Of their first life, and on their crime and faults

    To think, and keep them for their penalties

    Which will be far from death; and mindful grow

    Of pious duties, by God's judgments taught;

    To wait expectant for their penalty

    130 And their descendants', fruit of their own crime;

    Or else to live wholly the life of sheep,22

    Without a name; and in God's ear, now deaf,

    Pour unavailing weeping. Shall not God

    Almighty, 'neath whose law are all things ruled,

    135 Be able after death life to restore?

    Or is there ought which the creation's Lord

    Unable seems to do? If, darkness chased,

    He could outstretch the light, and could compound

    All the world's mass by a word suddenly,

    140 And raise by potent voice all things from nought,

    Why out of somewhat23 could He not compound

    The well-known shape which erst had been, which He

    Had moulded formerly; and bid the form

    Arise assimilated to Himself

    145 Again? Since God's are all things, earth the more

    Gives Him all back; for she will, when He bids,

    Unweave whate'er she woven had before.

    If one, perhaps, laid on sepulchral pyre,

    The flame consumed; or one in its blind waves

    150 The ocean have dismembered; if of one

    The entrails have, in hunger, satisfied

    The fishes; or on any's limbs wild beasts

    Have fastened cruel death; or any's blood,

    His body reft by birds, unhid have lain:

    155 Yet shall they not wrest from the mighty Lord

    His latest dues. Need is that men appear

    Quickened from death 'fore God, and at His bar

    Stand in their shapes resumed. Thus arid seeds

    Are drops into the vacant lands, and deep

    160 In the fixt furrows die and rot: and hence

    Is not their surface24 animated soon

    With stalks repaired? and do they25 not grow strong

    And yellow with the living grains? and, rich

    With various usury,26 new harvests rise

    165 In mass? The stars all set, and, born again,

    Renew their sheen; and day dies with its light

    Lost in dense night; and now night wanes herself

    As light unveils creation presently;

    And now another and another day

    170 Rises from its own stars; and the sun sets,

    Bright as it is with splendour-bearing light;

    Light perishes when by the coming eve

    The world27 is shaded; and the phoenix lives

    By her own soot28 renewed, and presently

    175 Rises, again a bird, O wondrous sight!

    After her burnings! The bare tree in time

    Shoots with her leaves; and once more are her boughs

    Curved by the germen of the fruits. While then

    The world29 throughout is trembling at God's voice,

    180 And deeply moved are the high air's powers,30

    Then comes a crash unwonted, then ensue

    Heaven's mightiest murmurs, on the approach of God,

    The whole world's31 Judge! His countless ministers

    Forthwith conjoin their rushing march, and God

    185 With majesty supernal fence around.

    Angelic bands will from the heaven descend

    To earth; all, God's host, whose is faculty

    Divine; in form and visage spirits all

    Of virtue: in them fiery vigour is;

    190 Rutilant are their bodies; heaven's might

    Divine about them flashes; the whole orb

    Hence murmurs; and earth, trembling to her depths

    (Or whatsoe'er her bulk is32 ), echoes back

    The roar, parturient of men, whom she,

    195 Being bidden, will with grief upyield.33 All stand

    In wonderment. At last disturbed are

    The clouds, and the stars move and quake from height

    Of sudden power.34 When thus God comes, with voice

    Of potent sound, at once throughout all realms

    200 The sepulchres are burst, and every ground

    Outpours bones from wide chasms, and opening sand

    Outbelches living peoples; to the hair35

    The members cleave; the bones inwoven are

    With marrow; the entwined sinews rule

    205 The breathing bodies; and the veins 'gin throb

    With simultaneously infused blood:

    And, from their caves dismissed, to open day

    Souls are restored, and seek to find again

    Each its own organs, as at their own place

    210 They rise. O wondrous faith! Hence every age

    Shoots forth; forth shoots from ancient dust the host

    Of dead. Regaining light, there rise again

    Mothers, and sires, and high-soured youths, and boys,

    And maids unwedded; and deceased old men

    215 Stand by with living souls; and with the cries

    Of babes the groaning orb resounds.36 Then tribes

    Various from their lowest seats will come:

    Bands of the Easterns; those which earth's extreme

    Sees; those which dwell in the downsloping clime

    220 Of the mid-world, and hold the frosty star's

    Riphaean citadels. Every colonist

    Of every land stands frighted here: the boor;

    The son of Atreus37 with his diadem

    Of royalty put off; the rich man mixt

    225 Coequally in line with pauper peers.

    Deep tremor everywhere: then groans the orb

    With prayers; and peoples stretching forth their hands

    Grow stupid with the din! The Lord Himself

    Seated, is bright with light sublime; and fire

    230 Potent in all the Virtues38 flashing shines.

    And on His high-raised throne the Heavenly One

    Coruscates from His seat; with martyrs hemmed

    (A dazzling troop of men), and by His seers

    Elect accompanied (whose bodies bright

    235 Effulgent are with snowy stoles), He towers

    Above them. And now priests in lustrous robes

    Attend, who wear upon their marked39 front

    Wreaths golden-red; and all submissive kneel

    And reverently adore. The cry of all

    240 Is one: "O Holy, Holy Holy, God!"

    To these40 the Lord will mandate give, to range

    The people in twin lines; and orders them

    To set apart by number the depraved;

    While such as have His biddings followed

    245 With placid words He calls, and bids them, clad

    With vigour-death quite conquered-ever dwell

    Amid light's inextinguishable airs,

    Stroll through the ancients' ever blooming realm,

    Through promised wealth, through ever sunny swards,

    250 And in bright body spend perpetual life.

    A place there is, beloved of the Lord,

    In Eastern coasts, where light is bright and clear,

    And healthier blows the breeze; day is eterne,

    Time changeless: 'tis a region set apart

    255 By God, most rich in plains, and passing blest,

    In the meridian41 of His cloudless seat.

    There gladsome the air, and is in light

    Ever to be; soft is the wind, and breathes

    Life-giving blasts; earth, fruitful with a soil

    260 Luxuriant, bears all things; in the meads

    Flowers shed their fragrance; and upon the plains

    The purple-not in envy-mingles all

    With golden-ruddy light. One gladsome flower,

    With its own lustre clad, another clothes;

    265 And here with many a seed the dewy fields

    Are dappled, and the snowy tilths are crisped

    With rosy flowers. No region happier

    Is known in other spots; none which in look

    Is fairer, or in honour more excels.

    270 Never in flowery gardens are there born

    Such lilies, nor do such upon our plains

    Outbloom; nor does the rose so blush, what time,

    New-born, 'tis opened by the breeze; nor is

    The purple with such hue by Tyrian dye

    275 Imbued. With coloured pebbles beauteous gleams

    The gem: here shines the prasinus;42 there glows

    The carbuncle; and giant-emerald

    Is green with grassy light. Here too are born

    The cinnamons, with odoriferous twigs;

    280 And with dense leaf gladsome amomum Joins

    Its fragrance. Here, a native, lies the gold

    Of radiant sheen; and lofty groves reach heaven

    In blooming time, and germens fruitfullest

    Burden the living boughs. No glades like these

    285 Hath Ind herself forth-stretcht; no tops so dense

    Rears on her mount the pine; nor with a shade

    So lofty-leaved is her cypress crisped;

    Nor better in its season blooms her bough

    In spring-tide. Here black firs on lofty peak

    290 Bloom; and the only woods that know no hail

    Are green eternally: no foliage falls;

    At no time fails the flower. There, too, there blooms

    A flower as red as Tarsine purple is:

    A rose, I ween, it is (red hue it has,

    295 An odour keen); such aspect on its leaves

    It wears, such odour breathes. A tree it43 stands,

    With a new flower, fairest in fruits; a crop

    Life-giving, dense, its happy strength does yield.

    Rich honies with green cane their fragrance Join,

    300 And milk flows potable in runners full;

    And with whate'er that sacred earth is green,

    It all breathes life; and there Crete's healing gift44

    Is sweetly redolent. tide,

    Flows in the placid plains a fount: four floods

    305 Thence water parted lands.45 The garden robed

    With flowers, I wot, keeps ever spring; no cold

    Of wintry star varies the breeze; and earth,

    After her birth-throes, with a kindlier blast

    Repairs. Night there is none; the stars maintain

    310 Their darkness; angers, envies, and dire greed

    Are absent; and out-shut is fear, and cares

    Driven from the threshold. Here the Evil One

    Is homeless; he is into worthy courts

    Out-gone, nor is't e'er granted him to touch

    315 The glades forbidden. But here ancient faith

    Rests in elect abode; and life here treads,

    Joying in an eternal covenant;

    And health46 without a care is gladsome here

    In placid tilths, ever to live and be

    320 Ever in light.

    Here whosoe'er hath lived

    Pious, and cultivant of equity

    And goodness; who hath feared the thundering God

    With mind sincere; with sacred duteousness

    Tended his parents; and his other life47

    325 Spent ever crimeless; or who hath consoled

    With faithful help a friend in indigence;

    Succoured the over-toiling needy one,

    As orphans' patron, and the poor man's aid;

    Rescued the innocent, and succoured them

    330 When press with accusation; hath to guests

    His ample table's pledges given; hath done

    All things divinely; pious offices

    Enjoined; done hurt to none; ne'er coveted

    Another's: such as these, exulting all

    335 In divine praises, and themselves at once

    Exhorting, raise their voices to the stars;

    Thanksgivings to the Lord in joyous wise

    They psalming celebrate; and they shall go

    Their harmless way with comrade messengers.

    340 When ended hath the Lord these happy gifts,

    And likewise sent away to realms eterne

    The just, then comes a pitiable crowd

    Wailing its crimes; with parching tears it pours

    All groans effusely, and attests48 in acts

    345 With frequent ululations. At the sight

    Of flames, their merit's due, and stagnant pools

    Of fire, wrath's weapons, they 'gin tremble all.49

    Them an angelic host, upsnatching them,

    Forbids to pray, forbids to pour their cries

    350 (Too late!) with clamour loud: pardon withheld,

    Into the lowest bottom they are hurled!

    O miserable men! how oft to you

    Hath Majesty divine made itself known!

    The sounds of heaven ye have heard; have seen

    355 Its lightnings; have experienced its rains

    Assiduous; its ires of winds and hail!

    How often nights and days serene do make

    Your seasons-God's gifts-fruitful with fair yields!

    Roses were vernal; the grain's summer-tide

    360 Failed not; the autumn variously poured

    Its mellow fruits; the rugged winter brake

    The olives, icy though they were: 'twas God

    Who granted all, nor did His goodness fail.

    At God earth trembled; on His voice the deep

    365 Hung, and the rivers trembling fled and left

    Sands dry; and every creature everywhere

    Confesses God! Ye (miserable men!)

    Have heaven's Lord and earth's denied; and oft

    (Horrible!) have God's heralds put to flight;50

    370 And rather slain the just with slaughter fell;

    And, after crime, fraud ever hath in you

    Inhered. Ye then shall reap the natural fruit

    Of your iniquitous sowing. That God is

    Ye know; yet are ye wont to laugh at Him.

    375 Into deep darkness ye shall go of fire

    And brimstone; doomed to suffer glowing ires

    In torments just.51 God bids your bones descend

    To52 penalty eternal; go beneath

    The ardour of an endless raging hell;53

    380 Be urged, a seething mass, through rotant pools

    Of flame; and into threatening flame He bids

    The elements convert; and all heaven's fire

    Descend in clouds. 3 Then greedy Tartarus

    With rapid fire enclosed is; and flame

    385 Is fluctuant within with tempest waves;

    And the whole earth her whirling embers blends!

    There is a flamy furrow; teeth acute

    Are turned to plough it, and for all the years54

    The fiery torrent will be armed: with force

    390 Tartarean will the conflagrations gnash

    Their teeth upon the world.55 There are they scorched

    In seething tide with course precipitate;

    Hence flee; thence back are borne in sharp career;

    The savage flame's ire meets them fugitive!

    395 And now at length they own the penalty

    Their own, the natural issue of their crime.

    And now the reeling earth, by not a swain

    Possest, is by the sea's profundity

    Prest, at her farthest limit, where the sun

    400 (His ray out-measured) divides the orb,

    And where, when traversed is the world,56 the stars

    Are hidden. Ether thickens. O'er the light

    Spreads sable darkness; and the latest flames

    Stagnate in secret rills. A place there is

    405 Whose nature is with sealed penalties

    Fiery, and a dreadful marsh white-hot

    With heats infernal, where, in furnaces

    Horrific, penal deed roars loud, and seethes,

    And, rushing into torments, is up-caught

    410 By the flame's vortex wide; by savage wave

    And surge the turbid sand all mingled is

    With miry bottom. Hither will be sent,

    Groaning, the captive crowd of evil ones,

    And wickedness (the sinful body's train)

    415 To burn! Great is the beating there of breasts,

    By bellowing of grief accompanied;

    Wild is the hissing of the flames, and thence

    The ululation of the sufferers!

    And flames, and limbs sonorous,57 will outrise

    420 Afar: more fierce will the fire burn; and up

    To th' upper air the groaning will be borne.

    Then human progeny its bygone deeds

    Of ill will weigh; and will begin to stretch

    Heavenward its palms; and then will wish to know

    425 The Lord, whom erst it would not know, what time

    To know Him had proved useful to them There,

    His life's excesses, handiworks unjust,

    And crimes of savage mind, each will confess,

    And at the knowledge of the impious deeds

    430 of his own life will shudder. And now first,

    Whoe'er erewhile cherished ill thoughts of God;

    Had worshipped stones unsteady, lyingly

    Pretending to divinity; hath e'er

    Made sacred to gore-stained images

    435 Altars; hath voiceless pictured figures feared;

    Hath slender shades of false divinity

    Revered; whome'er ill error onward hath

    Seduced; whoe'er was an adulterer,

    Or with the sword had slain his sons; whoe'er

    440 Had stalked in robbery; whoe'er by fraud

    His clients had deferred; whoe'er with mind

    Unfriendly had behaved himself, or stained

    His palms with blood of men, or poison mixt

    Wherein death lurked, or robed with wicked guise

    445 His breast, or at his neighbour's ill, or gain

    Iniquitous, was wont to joy; whoe'er

    Committed whatsoever wickedness

    Of evil deeds: him mighty heat shall rack,

    And bitter fire; and these all shall endure,

    450 In passing painful death, their punishment.

    Thus shall the vast crowd lie of mourning men!

    This oft as holy prophets sang of old,

    And (by God's inspiration warned) oft told

    The future, none ('tis pity!) none (alas!)

    455 Did lend his ears. But God Almighty willed

    His guerdons to be known, and His law's threats

    'Mid multitudes of such like signs promulged.

    He 'stablished them58 by sending prophets more,

    These likewise uttering words divine; and some,

    460 Roused from their sleep, He bids go from their tombs

    Forth with Himself, when He, His own tomb burst,

    Had risen. Many 'wildered were, indeed,

    To see the tombs agape, and in clear light

    Corpses long dead appear; and, wondering

    465 At their discourses pious, dulcet words!

    Starward they stretch their palms at the mere sound,59

    And offer God and so-victorious Christ

    Their gratulating homage. Certain 'tis

    That these no more re-sought their silent graves,

    470 Nor were retained within earth's bowels shut;60

    But the remaining host reposes now

    In lowliest beds, until-time's circuit run-

    That great day do arrive. Now all of you

    Own the true Lord, who alone makes this soul

    475 Of ours to see His light,61 and can the same

    (To Tartarus sent) subject to penalties;

    And to whom all the power of life and death

    Is open. Learn that God can do whate'er

    He list; for 'tis enough for Him to will,

    480 And by mere speaking He achieves the deed;

    And Him nought plainly, by withstanding, checks.

    He is my God alone, to whom I trust

    With deepest senses. But, since death con

    Every career, let whoe'er is to-day

    485 Bethink him over all things in his mind.

    And thus, while life remains, while 'tis allowed

    To see the light and change your life, before

    The limit of allotted age o'ertake

    You unawares, and that last day, which62 is

    490 By death's law fixt, your senseless eyes do glaze,

    Seek what remains worth seeking: watchful be

    For dear salvation; and run down with ease

    And certainty the good course. Wipe away

    By pious sacred rites your past misdeeds

    495 Which expiation need; and shun the storms,

    The too uncertain tempests, of the world.63

    Then turn to right paths, and keep sanctities.

    Hence from your gladsome minds depraved crime

    Quite banish; and let long-inveterate fault

    500 Be washed forth from your breast; and do away

    Wicked ill-stains contracted; and appease

    Dread God by prayers eternal; and let all

    Most evil mortal things to living good

    Give way: and now at once a new life keep

    505 Without a crime; and let your minds begin

    To use themselves to good things and to true:

    And render ready voices to God's praise.

    Thus shall your piety find better things

    All growing to a flame; thus shall ye, too,

    510 Receive the gifts of the celestial life;64

    And, to long age, shall ever live with God,

    Seeing the starry kingdom's golden joys.

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