9 > -< -n J> O 8 = ^ --.-- ."iS*' '-'? I'&.^^ls^JsjSRii^'OJ.- ..'^ i^!J!\J',iCJ*w1W*^,JrM/:J THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES CALVAMY OR, THE DEATH OF CHRIST. A POEM, IN EIGHT BOOKS. BY* RICHARD CUMBERLAND, a neiu (ifcniticn. VOL. II. LONDON: FEINTED FOR LACKINGTON, ALLEN, AND CO. TEMPLli OF THE MUSES, FINSB U11Y-SU ARE, B/ J. D. Dcv/ick, Aldcr3g?.te Street. 1803.^ OR, C6e Deat6 of Cf)nist. BOOK V. :3 THE ARGUMENT OF THE FIFTH BOOK. his Book, proposing to treat of the trial and condemnation of Christ, opens vilh an invocation to the Evanf^rlists, the sacred historians of that event. Christ, Iruught before the priests and elders in council, accused hy the icitnesses, interrogated by Caiaphas, persists in keeping silence, till being solemnly railed upon to declare himself, he answers by an affirmation of the truth. Instantly all voices are let loose upon him, ac- cusing him of blasphemy and pronouncing him worthy of death : He is delivered over to mockery and insult. The Jews resolve to arraign him before Pilate on the following morning. He turns and looks upon Peter, who according to prediction had three several times denied him. The sorroiv and contri- tion of that Disciple is described ; he retires apart to bewail his crime and supplicate forgiveness. His prayer and con- fessionin the temple porch. The council of the Jews resort to Pilate nert morning and appeal against Christ. He informs them that by the Roman law no judgment can be given tilt the accused is confronted with his accusers, and heard in his de- fence. Now commences the trial of Christ before Pilate, who, finding nothing worthy of death in that just person, refers him to Herod as belonging to his jurisdiction. Herod, after viocking liim, arrays him in a gorgeous robe, and in that apparel sends him back to Pilate. He again appears in the judgment hall before Pilate, who after many fruitless efforts to save him, the Jews still urging hiin by their clamorous im- portunity to crucify him, finding no other way to prevent a tumult of the people, after declaring himself innocent of the blood of Jesus by the ceremony of washing his hands before the multitude, delivers him to be crucified. CAJLYAMY. BOOK V. THE CONDEMNATION OF CHRIST. jl e sacred Guides, whose plain unvarnish'd page, Penn'd by the hand of Truth, records the scene. Where Christ before the bar of impious men. Patient of all their scorn, arraign'd, betray 'd And of his own abandon'd, silent stands, 3 You I invoke ; so from the same pure source> Whence my faith flows, shall also flow my song. Not idly babbling, like that shallow rill Trickling at foot of the Parnassian Mount, But deep, serene, to hallow 'd airs attun'd : 10 Aid me from Heav'n, where now before God's throne In evangelic attributes ye stand VOjL, II. B 0" CALVARY. Six-wing'd and thick bespangled o'er with eyes, Ranging all points before you and behind. Seraphic minstrels, chanting day and night 15 Your ceaseless hallelujahs to the name Of Him, who was and is and is to come. Led by your hand with trembling step I press The sacred ground, which my Redeemer trode. Now like a lamb to slaughter led, and now 20 Pendent, Oh horror ! on the bloody tree ; And whilst to tell his sacrifice of love, His soul-dissolving agonies I strive. My heart melts into sorrows deep as those, When the sad daughters of Jerusalem 25 Water'd his passage to the cross with tears. Musing my pious theme, as fits a bard Far onward in the wint'ry track of age, I shun the Muses haunts, nor dalliance hold Witli fancy by the way, but travel on 30 My mournful road, a pilgrim grey with years ; BOOK THE FIFTH. One tliat finds little favor with the world, Yet thankful for it's least benevolence And patient of it's taunts ; for never yet Lur'd I the popu'lar ear with gibing tales, 35 Or sacrific'd the modesty of song. Harping lewd madrigals at drunken feasts To make the vulgar sport and win their shout. Me rather the still voice delights, the praise Whisper'd, not publish'd by fame's braying trump : Be thou my herald, Nature ! Let me please 41 The sacred few, let my remembrance live Embosom'd by the virtuous and the wise ; [lov'd : Make me, O Heav'n ! by those, who love thee. So when the widow's and the children's tears 45 Shall sprinkle the cold dust, in which 1 sleep Pompless and from a scornful world withdrawn, The laurel, which it's malice rent, shall shoot So water'd into Ufe, and mantling throw It s verdant honors o'er my grassy tomb. 50 8 CALVARY. Here in mid-way of my unfinish'd course. Doubtful of future time whilst now I pause To fetch new breath and trim my waining lamp. Fountain of Life, if I have still ador'd Thy mercy and remember'd Thee with awe 55 Ev'n in my mirth, in the gay prime of youth So conscience witnesses, the mental scribe. That registers my errors, quits me here Propitious Pow'r, support me ! and if death, Near at the fartliest, meditates the blow 60 To cut me short in my prevented task. Spare me a little, and put by the stroke. Till I recount his overtlirow and hail Thy Son victorious rising from the grave. Now to- that dismal scene return, my thoughts ! 65 Where Christ in midst of an irreverent crew, Usher'd by torches through tlie darkling streets, And now at summit of the holy Mount Arriv'd, before tlie pontift''s lofty gate. BOOK THE FIFTH. 9 Waiting the call of impious pride, attends. 70 The halls and lobbies vomit forth a swarm Of saucy servitors with ideot stare Gazing the wond'rous Man, and venting loud Their coward mockeries : He stands unmov'd. Great is the stir within, and on the post 75 Through all the palace runs the buzzing news Of this great Prophet's capture, circling round With ever new enlargement of strange sights And fearful doings in the garden seen Of those who took him. Caiaphas meanwhile 80 Summons the Temple-chiefs, elders and scribes, A hasty Sanhedrim : No longer now With stately step in measur'd pace they march ; Huddled together by their fears they flock. They cluster in a throng, safest so deem'd, 85 And fill the council seats. In speech abrupt And brief their hierarch the cause expounds- Of their so sudden meeting Christ is seiz'd. 10 CALVARY. The Prophet, whom they dreaded, is in hold, Th' Enchanter, who by league with Beelzebub 90 Scar'd them with magic spells, is at tlieir door 3 Now is the time to put his art to proof. Now is tlie moment to decide if thus Their unreveal'd Messias shall appear After long promise in tliis abject state 95 A shackled pris'ner, or a conquering king. Admit him ! with faint voice some two or three Of the least timorous cry. Behold, he comes ! The rabble throng rush in, and at the bar Of the immur'd divan present him bound 100 With cords, his raiment soil'd with hands profane, His head uncover'd and his sacred locks By the rude winds and ruder men despoil'd Of their propriety, dishevell'd, spread Like shatter'd fragments on the branching top 105 Of piny Lebanon after a storm. Silence now reign'd,the roar of tongues was hush'd, BOOK THE FIFTH. ii And expectation with suspended breath Sate watchful when some sign or word of power Should in a miracle break forth upon them. 1 1 None such that patient Sufferer vouchsaf 'd, Nor menace nor complaint his eye bespake, But meek serene composure. Noting this. As cowards out of danger loudest vaunt. The council now took heart : Then soon were heard The lying tongues of witnesses subom'd ll6 Various and loud ; but these no order kept; Falsehood with falsehood clash'd, and each to each Irreconcileable, as all to truth : Shame held the council mute, for vilest hearts, 120 Cloak'd in the robes of judgment, will affect Some outward shew of what they ought to be, Then most malicious when most seeming just. Confusion now ensu'd and perjury In it's own labyrinth had lost itself, 125 When some of graver note within the pale 13 CALVARY. Of justice seated, but far thence remov'd In conscience and in heart, started new charge. Averring they had heard the Pris'ner say I will destroy this temple made with hands, 130 And within three days will another build [urg'd. Made witliout hands. ^The charge was gravely And, color'd to the semblance of a plot, Breath'd sacrilegious menace to God's house. Fit matter for descant pontifical : 135 When Caiaphas, as foremost in degree So first to sound forth dapger and affix Solemnity to malice, from his state With magisterial dignity arose, And sternly fixing on the face divine 140 His eye inquisitorial, thus began. [charge Hear'st thou what these alledge ? Ihe words in Stand witness'd by these present : Face to face Th' accusers they and thou ih' accused meet : Justice is open. What is thy defence ? 1-15 BOOK THE FIFTH. 13 Answerest thou nothing ? ^Nothing answer'd he. But as a lamb before it's shearers mute He open'd not his mouth ; the mystery couch'd Under those words, prophetic of his death And following resurrection, to expound 15Q To their perverted minds beseem'd not him, Searcher of hearts and Savior of mankind : Silent not pertinacious he endur'd Their scorn, nor did his meek demeanour shew More than the dignity of conscious truth, 155 Which knows itself prejudg'd and scorns a plea. But Caiaphas, who brookd not this repulse, And stiD occasion sought from his own lips By subtlety to' ensnare him, thus re-urg'd Question with solemn adjuration back'd. 160 Hear me, thou man accus'd, and answer make I do adjure thee by the living God To what I now demand. Art thou the Christ, The very Christ, Son of th' eternal God, 14 CALVARY. Or art thou not ? Resolve us who thou art ! 105 Then Jesus by this solemn adjuration urg'd. Lifting his eyes to heav'n in mute appeal. Whilst all his Father's virtue in his face Effulgent beam'd, these glorious words pronounc'd ; Hear them, O heav'n, and Oh ! record them, earth. Write them, ye mortals, on your hearts I am, 171 I am the Christ ; all that you ask I am; And ye shall see me coming in the clouds Of heav'n, enthron'd at the right hand of Power. As when on rapine bent a savage horde 175 Arab or Indian, in some sandy dell Or by the sedgy lake in ambush lodg'd, LTpon the watch-word by their leader giv'n Leap from their treach'rous lair with sudden yell And bloody weapons waving to suprlze 1 80 And overpower th' unguarded traveller. Fatally trapp'd into their murderous snare ; So at the signal of their priestly chief BOOK THE FIFTH. 15 Uprose the dire divan with rushing sound. Like roar of distant waters. Terror-struck, 185 Frantic as Bromius, with furious hands Th' enthusiastic hierarch seiz'd his robes. And into tatters like a cancell'd scroll Tore them, exclaiming vehement and loud ISg That all might hear What need of further proof ? Ye' have heard his blasphemy. How think ye, sirs ? What may such crime deserve ? Th' infuriate priests Seiz'd by like phrensy witli one voice pronounce Death be his sentence ! Death through all the hall Rebounding echoes back tli' accurs'd decree. 195 Horrible sentence ! Murder hatch'd in hell ; Libation for the fiends ; Daemons, on you And on your generations to all time His righteous blood shall rest. Now uproar wild And horrid din succeeds : The scoffing crowd 200 Rush to the bar, so privileg'd, and there Witli scurril taunts and blasphemies revile 16 CALVARY. The patient Son of God. Oh thought of horror ! The Savior of mankind revil'd by man, The Just by tli' unjust ! Others more profane 205 Vent tlieir vile rheum upon his sacred face. Or smite him with their palms, then gibing cry Tell us who smote thee j prophesy, thou Christ ! Monsters,that Christ hath prophesied,your doom Alteady by that Prophet is pronounc'd, 210 The lips you strike have utter'd it : Behold ! Jerusalem is fall'n, her towers are dust, Your city smokes in ruin : Lo ! what piles Of mangled carcases ; what horrid scenes Of violated matrons : Hark ! what screams 2 1 5 Of infants butcher'd in their mothers arms ; And look ! your temple blazes to the sky ; It's beams of cedar overlaid with gold, / It's fretted roof with carvings rich emboss'd. And all it's glorious splendor feeds the flames 220 Insatiate ; mark how high their serpent spires BOOK THE FIFTH. \^ Hissing ascend : God fans them in his ire : Thither the wild beasts of the desert hie. There carrion owls by midnight haunt, there dwells The dragon, and the satyrs dance : 'Tis done ! 225 That prophecy is seal'd. There yet remains An awful consummation unreveal'd. Till God shall gather up your scatter'd race Still vagrant o'er th' inhospitable earth. Ah ! wretched people, broken and dispers'd, 230 Did ye preserve the oracles of God But to convict your own obduracy ? Sad nation, on whose neck the Iron yoke Of persecution hard, too hard, hath lain. And yet lies heavy, will ye not accept. 235 A High Priest, holy, harmless, undefil'd, From sinners sep'rate and exalted high Above the heavens ? And do ye not perceive The word of Jesus in yourselves fulfill'd ? Rue then the prophecy, which you provok'd, 240 JS CALVARY. Of faithless fathers ye still faitliless sons 1 Whilst shuddering I recount the impious taunts Of that blaspheming rout : But neitlier taunts Nor violence could shake the Savior's peace ; He in his own pure spi'rit collected stood, 245 Nor of their base revilings took account. 'Twas now that Christ, knowing himself denied Three times of Peter, turn'd and look'd upon him. He from the garden, where his Lord was seiz'd. Following at distance Judas and his band, 250 Had kept his eye upon their moving tires, And up the sacred mount pursued their track. Till at the palace- door he stood and sought Admission witli the crowd ; when there behold ! A damsel at the portal scans him o'er 255 With scrutinizing eye and strait exclaims Thou too wert in this Galilean's train ; Thou art of Jesus. Sudden to his heart The ccnvard tremor rans and llicre suggests BOOK THE FIFTH. ig The fear-conceived lye ; before them all 200 With confidence to falsehood ill applied I know not what thou say'st he straight avers. And to the porch goes forth : There in his ear The cock his first shrill warning gives and sings The knell of constancy's predicted breach, 265 Of constancy, alas ! too strongly vouch'd By him in rash and over-weening zeal. Boasting like martyrdom with Christ himself. Sole sacrifice appointed for mankind. But he, though of presumption warn'd, by fear 2/0 Still haunted and the guilty dread of death, Strait to a second questioner replies I do not know the man and to engage Belief, binds down the falsehood with an oath. Fatal appeal to Heav'n ! insult to God 2~5 And His all-righteous ears ! Is this the man, Who with such glowing ardor self-assur'd Though all shall be offended, I will not 20 CALVARY. Proudly averr'd, and for that pride reprov'd Though I should die with thee, dauntless rejoin'd. Yet will I not deny thee ? Man, weak man, 281 Pride was not made for thee. If Peter fell Presuming, who shall say, Behold ! 1 stand In my own strength nor ask support of God . And now, as if devoted to his shame, 285 Curious to pry, yet fearftil to be seen. He mixes with the throng that crowd the hall ; And there once more is challeng'd for his speech. As savo'ring of the Galilean phrase ; Then with reiterated oaths abjures 2gO His Master the third time ; when hark ! again The cock's loud signal echoes back the lye In his convicted ear ; the prophet bird Strains his recording tliroat, and up to heav'n Trumpets the trebled perjury and claps 295 His wings in triumph o'er presumptions fall. Oh ! fall'n how low, is this thy prorais'd faith, BOOK THE FIFTH. 21 Favor'd of Christ so highly? Know'st thou not. Disciple, thine own Lord ? or know'st him only In safety, in prosperity, in power, 300 For thine own selfish ends, a summer guest, Prone to desert him in the wint'ry hour Of tribulation, poverty and woe ? Is thy frail memory of that slippery stuff. That a friend's sorrow washes out all trace 305 Of a friend's features ? Look upon his eyes ! Behold, they turn on thee : Them dost thou know ? Their language canst thou read and from them draw The conscious reminiscence thou disown'st ? iMark, is their sweetness lost ? Ah ! no ; they beam Celestial grace, a sanctity of soul ~ 3 1 J So melting soft with pity, such a gleam Of love divine attemp'ring mild reproof, Where is the man, that to obtain that eye Of mercy on his sins vv^culd not forego 315 Life's dearest comforts to embrace such hope ? VOL. II. c 22 CALVARY. O death, death ! where would be thy sting, or where These awful tremblings, which thy coming stirs In my too conscious breast, might I aspire To hope my Judge would greet me with that look ? Vaunt not yourselves, ye scorners, nor exult 321 In this recital of a good man's fall, Faitliful historian of his own offence : But rather let it physic your proud spleen To mark how mean, prevaricating, false 325 And despicable a vain-glorious man. Peter's denial, David's heinous sin. And all the guilty lapses of man's heart. Though summ'd together into one account. Each spot and blemish malice can search out 330 To tarnish the fair lustre of a name. Stand but as lessons of humility. Warnings of frailty to o'er- weening man ; And if our mournful page hath now set forth The fall of virtue, let it next record 335 BOOK THE FIFTH. 23 It's glorious resurrection : We have shewn The' offender in his shame, what now remains But to display the penitent ? Behold ! Abash'd he stands bath'd in remorseful tears : One glance from his beloved Master's eye, 340 Like Nathan's parable, hath rous'd from sleep His drowsy conscience. Mark, where he retires To weep in solitude and purge his heart By sorrowful repentance of it's guilt. O Peter, could my verse fit offering malce, 345 That verse should be bestow'd upon thy tears Now the assembled elders and their chief. After short consultation had, resolve With the next dawn of morning to arraign Their Prisoner at the praetorian bar 350 Of Pilate, procurator for the state Imperial of Rome and Caesar ; he Held judgment sovereign of life and death In tributary Jewry, judge corrupt. 24 CALVARY. And like Rome's venal emissaries prone 355 To every sordid purpose ; train 'd in blood And for tribunal bloody therefore fit. Meanwhile forth issuing from the fatal hall. Scene of his shame, the sad Disciple took His pensive way across the temple-court 360 Silent and solitarj^, seeking where To' unbosom his full sorrows and give up His soul to pray'r, and pardon seek of God For his revolt. Pale through night's curtain gleam'd By fits the lunai: intermittent ray, 365 That quiv'ring serv'd to light his lonely steps To the fair gate call'd Beautiful, whose porch High over-arch'd, on writhed columns propp'd Of spiral brass convolv'd, was for it's shade Of Christ and his disciples much in quest. 3/0 Hither he came, and falling on his knees, Like th' humble publican smote on his breast. And this confession self-accusin?" made- r.Xf.ujU .iriil/'. 1Z^''C'/ a/ 7/7^ U^^y^^t::'/^^ ^^^mJ/^ Ico]l^.v.^S. titHUhM Xo.: i.i!^o>y. hv lackijiplcn.Jlu'u k Cf Tcuii'U .'- .v^JA. BOOK THE FIFTH. 25 Here let me fall and in repentant tears Weep out my soul upon these piti'less stones, 3/5 Made sacred by His steps, whose awful name Thrice blasphem'd, thrice abjur'd, I dare not speak, Though in my supplication. Can I say, Spare mo, O God of mercy ? Can I ask Pardon of God, unpardon'd of myself? 360 Oh ! wretched recreant creature as I am, What shall redeem me from this misery. And reconcile my conscience to itself, A perjur'd conscience ? Never more can peace Dwell in this bosom ; never can my soul 385 Ascend out of the dust, or lift a tliought In hope tow'rds heav'n. With Judas let me dwell, Colleague in treason ; with his sin my sin In the' execration of all time be link'd. Or shall I venture to look up and say, 39O O God, behold a wretch, who dares not sue For mercy but for mitigated wrath. 26 CALVARY. For punishment proportion 'd to my bearing. Protracted, not too sudden, lest it take My senses from me and with them all power 3f)5 Of meditation, penance and atonement ? Spare me a little to abhor myself j And if the arrow, which my conscienre drives Into this guilty heart, draws not enough Of it's vile blood to purify what's left, 400 Let the strong hand of justice force it home And finish me at once. Was I not warn'd Of my presumption, and a signal set To number my denials, when I swore Never to swerve but follow him to death ? 40!) Mine, Hke Iscariots, was predicted sin : I spar'd not him, I call'd his wilful guilt. Obstinate malice ', and can I now urge Necessity my plea ? All things are known To Christ; the evil motions of my will 410 lie saw, not ovcr-ruld : 1 might have pray'd BOOK THE FIFTH. 27 For grace, support, prevention j I pray'd not, But heedless of the prophecy and blind Rush'd into sin prepense, self-will'd, self-lost. What fascination seiz'd me to draw forth 415 The sword in rash defence of Him, whose word Legions of Angels could have call'd from heav'n ? And v/hat prevaricating daemon breath'd The lye into my lips, when the same night. Nay, the same hour, that saw me prompt to' oppose My hfe to danger, saw me meanly shrink 421 From what I courted, and behind a lye Three times repeated like a coward sculk ? And did I not know Christ whom I denied ? Did I not know the Master whom I servd, 425 Who call'd me to him, pour'd into my heart His heav'nly doctrines, rais'd my lowly thoughts From the mean drudger}^ of a fisher's trade, And taught me in the energy of faith To walk upon that sea, in which ere-while 430 28 CALVARY. I dragg'd the net and toil'd for daily bread ? memory, once my glory, now my curse. To what sad purpose do I call thee home, Absent m danger, present in despair ? Is there a wonder done of Christ on earth 435 1 have not wltness'd ? Did I not behold Dead Lazarus revive at his command ? What shall I say to him, whom I saw die. When living he arraigns me tace to face ? What answer make to those, whom I have serv 'd 440 From one small wallet with the bread of thousands ? The very blind, ere they rccciv'd their sight. Saw more than I, and hail'dhim Lord and Christ. Who shall believe when I renouiice belief ? The very dev'ils own Him whom I denied. 4A5 Can I call these accurst, whose impious cry l!)oonis him to death j who smite him with their palms Blaspheming? Harder than their hands my heart, [derj Wretch, 'twas my false Longuelrain'dthemontomur- BOOK THE FIFTH. 29 On me, me only all their sin rebounds : 450 I stand condemn'd, they free. Can I forget How oft my lips confess'd him Son of God ? Perish that tongue, which could rev'oke it's faith, Disown confession and belie my heart. Denied of me on earth, when in the clouds 455 Of heav'n he comes at the right hand of Pow'r, And ?ends his Angels with the trumpet's sound To gather his elect from the four winds. When, as a shepherd culling out his flock. To separate all nations and divide 4G0 The good from evil he proceeds, Ah ! then. Then will he not retort the fatal words First us'd of me, I know thee not ! Depart, Thou wicked servant, into outer darkness. There weep and gnash thy teeth in fires prcpar'd For Satan and his outcast crew accurst ? 466 Thus he all night with deep remorse o'erwhelm'd, Mournfully kneeling at God's temple-gate. 30 CALVARY. Bewail'd his crime and supplication made For pardon ; and let after-times attest 4/0 How full a portion of God's spi'rit abode In this blest Penitent, when with the sound Of rushing mighty winds it was pour'd down On him and on his fellows, thence install'd Apostles, and with gifted tongues inspir'd 4/5 To speak all languages and preach the Word or Christ throughout the whole converted world. Here in this very spot, where now lie kneels Repentant, fiU'd ere long with pow'r divine, He bade the cripple in the name of Christ 480 Rise up and walk : He at the word in sight Of all the people rose and stood and waik'd And in the temple gave loud praise to God. I'hen let not his offence, pardon'd of God, By man but for example's sake be nam'd, 485 And once more, hail, thou renovated Saint I Made brighter by repentance : Enter thou BOOK THE FIFTH. 31 Into thy Master's joy once more ; resume Thine apostolic primacy, and feed. Shepherd of Christ deputed, feed his flock. 49O Nor shall thy faith once faulter, nor thy zeal Shrink from the test of martyrdom, reservd To glorify thy Master on the cross. Now morning from her cloudy barrier forth Advancing crimson'd all the flecker'd East, 4g5 As blushing to lead on the guilty day. With the first dawn the wakeful elders meet. Short council hold, for little time suffic'd To take their voices, whose relentless minds In the same bloody league were banded all j 500 And now unanimous witli tlieir high priest In stately grave procession forth they march To find their heatlien judge, and at his bar Arraign tlie Holy One, But check, my heart, Thine indignation ; let the verse proceed ! 505 Han in his seat of judgment high enthron'd. 32 CALVARY. Witli axes and with llctors round embay 'd In martial state, with reverence tliey salute. And lowly stoop their tributary heads To his vice-gerent majesty : With smile 510 Of condescending favor he accepts Their abject greeting, and to his right hand Their chief advances ; others in their ranks And orders he disposes ; then with feign'd Solicitude, as if to seek the cause 515 Of this concerted meeting, he begins. What cause so weighty brings Jehovah's priest V\'ith these wise elders and time-honor'd scribes Thus early to seek justice at my bar ? Appeal so reverend, with such leader gracd 520 And by such followers witness'd, well demands Of Caesar's servant his most equal ear. Whereto the' high priest, second to none in craft, With solemn accent and demeanor grave Masking his base collusion, thus replies. 525 BOOK THE FIFTH. 33 When he, whose hand the sword of justice sways. Her balance also holds in equal poise Over this realm provincial, we have cause To thank the master of our liberties, 529 Who by such delegation of his power [necks. Makes light that yoke, which else would gall our Though Caesar lays it on us : Then let praise Be giv'n to Caesar for the love we bear To Pontius Pilate. Have 1 leave to say. That we your servants, a peculiar race, 535 Pay worship to one God and hold at heart As sacred that commandment handed down From our forefathers, which for ever makes His undivided Unity the creed Of all our nation ; and whoe'er blasphemes 540 His name and controverts our holy faith. Dies by our law ? This sentence we have pass'd, But execution staid, so bound in duty. Upon a certain Nazarite, by name 34 CALVARY. Jesus, obscure of birth, but of our peace 545 No slight disturber j for the common herd, A monster as you know with many heads, And every head with twice as many ears Itching for novelties, have rais'd this man To dang'rous eminence ; and for he cheats 550 Their gross credulity with juggling sleights. Which they call miracles, have blown his pride To such a monstrous bulk, he now scales heaven. There seats himself Oh ! where shall 1 find words To speak his blasphemy ? at God's right hand, 555 His Son, his equal, sharer of his throne. Judge of the world. If this be not a crime For death to expiate we are slaves indeed. And every statute, ordinance and law Rome leaves inviolate, Jesus shall break 560 Unpunish'd : Nor is this, dread sir, the whole Of his presumption ; mark, I pray, the heighth To which his phrensy rages, mark his threat ! BOOK THE FIFTH. 35 He will put down this temple in three days And in like time with hands invisible 565 Erect another. Patron of our laws. Fountain of justice ! ought this man to live ? Such madness breath'd into our peoples minds Will spur them to the deed, break every band That ties them down to order, and turn loose 570 Their fury not on us alone but Rome, Not on our temple only but perhaps On this tribunal, which Heav'n guard ! And now Take the whole matter of our charge at once : This Jesus hath pronounc'd himself a king, 575 Our king, your master's rival : You best know If your great empe'ror abdicates his right To our allegiance, which we fain would hold. Where we have vow'd it, to imperial Caesar, Not to this mean mechanic, Joseph's son. 580 This is our plea, O Pontius, why we claim Justice against the pris'ner, who now waits 3G CALVARY. Your sentence under guard and bound, as fits Delinquent so atrocious : 1 have said. To him the Roman Be it known to all, 585 The sentence, which you urge against the life Of your now absent pris'ner, cannot pass By practice of our law, till face to face With his accusers he shall stand at bar, And licence have to answer for himself 5gO Touching the crime in charge ; therefore these words. Which you have largely spent, are spent in air, Else might the ear of justice be forestall'd By the empleader's charge, and so perchance Let fall the axe upon the guiltless head. 5c;5 Much knowledge of your laws I cannot boast. Nor with these learned scribes hold argument ; For so much therefore as to them pertains I on tlie part of Caesar am no judge ; His tributes, his supremacy and rights 600 Disputed or oppos'd I shall uphold BOOK THE FIFTH. 37 'Gainst all offenders. Let th' accus'd appear ! This said, behold the blessed Son of God Dragg'd to a pagan bar ! There whilst he stood A spectacle of pity, patient, meek, 605 Submitted to his fate, Pilate, who knew Him innocent and his accusers false. Envious and cruel, ey'd him o'er and o'er. And as he ponder'd in his mind how base The sentence he was now requir'd to give, 6lO Some sparks of Roman virtue, not quite dead Though faintly felt in his degene'rate breast. Revolted from the deed : Soft was the touch. Though ineffectual, which sweet pity gave 6l4 To his stern heart : He wish'd, yet knew not how. To' unfold the gates of mercy, and through them. Let pass the rescued Innocent to life -, The son of Epicurus could no more. Upon the Sufferer's brow serene he saw Where innocence and sanctity enlhron'd 620 VOL. 11. D 38 CALVARY. Sate visible and claim'd his just award : He turn'd him to th' accusers and beheld Such malice, as brought up to view a groupe Of his own furies from their fabled hell ; Then with a frown he cries- What law is your's. Which makes this man a culprit ere he's tried ? 62(5 Unmanacle his limbs I A Roman judge Hears no man plead in shackles ; he, who speaks In life's defence hatli call for every aid That Nature can bestow, free use of limbs, 630 Action and utterance to grace his cause^ And hold him up against the world's contempt : 1 will not hear a man that pleads in bonds. Cut those vile cords asunder : Set him loose ! And now our blessed Lord, his arms releas'd 633 From the harsh thongs, which the malignant Jews Had bound about them, 'gan to re-compose His decent vesture and with calm survey To note his persecutors, those dire priests XJTf.l.ihjcUlp. r.,i-iiji.,, ::i^-'-Lj?o-?,ti, Ladci!^7:n,' uifn i.-i-r:f. - ,-/.., v. .-.-J-. BOOK THE FIFTH. 39 '} - '"~~ And era el hypocrites that bay'd him round- 640 In every bi'cast transparent to his eye Malice and craft and envy he discern'd : In Pilate's face the shifting hues bespoke Internal strife of passions all in arms. Combat 'twixt good and evil : In his hand 645 He held a scroll, which with intentive eye And thoughtful brow, deep pondering he perus'd: The writing well he knew, but the contents, Thus worded, muchperplex'd his wav'ring thoughts. " O Pilate, if thy wife was ever held 650 " In honor, love or trust, I do adjure thee " This once take warning from her voice inspir'd " To snatch tliee from destruction. Oh ! withhold *' Thine band from that just person, harm not him, " That holy Jesus, who now stands before theej " Touch not his sacred life, or on thine head 65Q " A fearful judgment thou shalt else pull down : *' A mighty Pow'r protects him, what I know not, 40 CALVARY. *' But mightier sure than all the Gods of Rome; " For I have seen his glory in a dream, 660 " And dreams descend from heav'n. Pilate,beware ! " Such was the warning scroll he now perus'd, Ev'n on the judgment seat, by timely hand Sent for his rescue : Happy ! had he turn'd His heart so warn'd to justice, and obey'd 665 The visitation of the spi'rit vouchsafd : But he, like Caesar, dcenid his manhood pledgd To make slight 'count of a weak woman's dream ; Yet much confus'd, uncertain and perplex'd He look'd arovmd, and saw all eyes upon him : 67O The Jews impatient, Jesus at the bar, Prepar'd for trial : "What shall he resolve ? Break up the court and judgment put aside For a mere vapor, for no better plea Than to indulge a woman's fond caprice, 6/5 And bid the law stand still and wait the time " Till Pilate's wife shall meet with better dreams ?" BOOK THE FIFTH. 41 Such scorn he dar'd not to provoke, and now Loud murmurs fill'd his ear : Compell'd to rise. Though uncollected, and in mind disturb'd, 680 He thus address'd tlie Lord. Art thou a king, And of this nation, who accuse tliee to me. King of the Jews ? Thou say'st it, Jesus cried : But say'st thou of thyself this thing, or taught Of others art thou prompted so to speak r 685 Am I a Jew ? the fault'ring judge replied ; Not I, but these, who if thou wert a king Were thine own subjects, elders, priests and scribes. These have accus'd tliee. Not of them am I ; Nor in this business covet further share, 6qO Than on the part of justice to demand, [charge ? What hast thou done ? How answer'st thou their Of this world were my kingdom, said our Lord, My seiTants would defend their King, and fight To save me from my' oppressors : But I reign 6g5 Not on this earth, nor is my pow'r firom hence. 42 CALVARY. Art thou a king then ?-^interpos'd the judge : Thou say'st, cried Jesus, that I am a king j And truly to this purpose was I born. And for this cause came I into the world, 7OO That I should witness bear unto the Truth ; And all, that to the Truth belong, hear me. What is the Truth ? said Pilate, but his voice J^Jow falter'd and his thoughts unsettled, wild And driv'n at random like a wreck, could grasp 705 No helm of reason ; only this he knew There was no fault before him : This aloud To all he publish'd, and pronounc'd him clear. Whereat with rage and disappointment stung. Furious as wolves defrauded of their prey, 7 10 Uprose the priests appellant, and afresh Urge o'er and o'er tlieir aggravating charge. Forging new falsehoods and re-forging old : The Preacher of forbearance, peace and love, Perverter of the nation now they call, 715 BOOK THE FifTH. 43 Fomenter of sedition, spreading wide From Galilee, the cradle of his birth. Throughout all Jewry to the capital ; Where now assuming to himself the name, Prerogative and state of King and Christ, 720 He stirretli up the people to revolt. Forbidding them to pay their rightfiil dues Of tribute to Rome's emperor, himself Exalting above Caesar. This and more In the like strain of virulence, with lips 725 In aspic venom steep'd they now depose ; Nor had they brought their malice to a pause, When Pilate, hoping he had now found plea To shift the dreaded sentence from himself. Thus interposing check'd their clam'rous spleen, 730 Break off, and let your tongues take rest awhile : It is not at this bar you must emplead This man, a Galilean as it seems : Whom, being such, it is not mine to hear 44 CALVARY. But Heroo's : Let his special tetrarch judge 735 'Twixt him and you : Thither remit your suit. This said, he rose preventing all reply. Whilst they, though by procrastination gall'd, Yet of their tetrarch confident, submit : But nor witla Herod could their malice speed 740 To it's main purpose : Little care had he For all their priestly clamor ; in his thoughts Religion had no interest, truth no weight : For prophets and for prophecies no ear Had he, alike regardless how Christ preach'd, 745 Or they complain'd ; yet much he wish'd to see Some splendid miracle of him perform'd. Something to strike his senses with surprize And satisfy a wanton curiosity. Made eager by the fame of those great works, 750 Whereof he much had heard and nothing seen. But when our Lord to all his questions mute Nor word nor sign vouchsaf d to wratli impell'd. BOOK THE FIFTH. 45 What by enticements he had fail'd to gain By taunts he hop'd to' extort j and now his spleen To impious scorn and mockery gave tlie rein : 756 Forthwith his Pris'ner in a gorgeous robe Apparel' d as a king, to all his court Held up for sport and laughter, he expos'd. Loud was the roar of blasphemy the whilst, 76O And wild the revels of the scoffing throng As the lewd orgies of the frantic god, Or clamor of that sacrilegious rout. When their mad rage the Thracian minstrel tore. Whose wonder-working harp could charm the ear Of hell and call dead nature into life. 7^ The priests look'd on and grinn'd malicious joy ; Yet would not Herod execution doom; Or willing to appease the jealousy Of Pilate, or content to mark his scorn 770 Of Jesus by this arrogant display Of mercy, as not dreading whom he spar'd. 46 CALVARY. Now once again at Pilate's bar he stands. Not as before like malefactor tied And round begirt with cords, but overlaid "/"IS With a rich load of sumptuous mockery ; A lamb compell'd to carry the proud spoils And guilty trappings of the ty'rannous wolf. .Again the judge with slow unwilling step To his tribunal mounts and thus he speaks. 780 You still persist to bring this man to me As a perverfer of your nation's faith And loyalty : Your witnesses I've heard, Ponder'd tlieir depositions and throughout Examin'd ev'ry tittle of your charge : 785 Him too I've question'd in the ears of all Here present, and no shadow of offence Can I discern to warrant your appeal For execution, and pass judgment on him : No, nor yet Herod, for to him I sent 79O Ym and your pris'ner, and behold him freed. BOOK THE FIFTH. 47 Nothing is done unto him worthy death : I will chastise him therefore and release ; Yet this chastisement rather to allay Your anger, than so merited of him, /QS I shall inflict. Remember this your feast Hath the long plea of custom to be mark'd With pardon and forbearance : To reprieve One culprit from his sentence I am bound No less by inclination than by rule 800 And usage immemorial : Alake your choice \ But let it fall on innocence not guilt. Instant all voices echo'd forth a cry Hsnce with this man ! away with him to death ! Give us the murd'rer, set Barabbas free : 805 Let Jesus perish ! Wherefore j for what crime ? Pilate exclaim'd : Vvliat evil hath he done ? No cause of death in Jesus can I find. Be witness for me, justice, none in him ; But for tliat wretch, on whom ye would bestow 810 48 CALVARY. Pardon misplac'd so various are his crimes, So black their quality, ye cannot name A death more terrible than he deser\'es. Take of tlie guiltless blood what stripes can draw To satisfy your longing, but forbear 815 To take the life, if not for pity's sake. In honour of yourselves, that ye may say. There was one prophet, whom ye did not kill. Loud as the winds that lash the raging seas And all as deaf, redoubling now the roar, 620 Th' infuriate Jews rend their blaspheming throats. Howling for blood ; 'till deafen'd with the din Of, Crucify him ! crucify him ! dreadful cry, Pilate, who 'twixt their tumult and the death Of that just Person saw no middle course, 825 By which t' escape, one solemn act prepar'd, By expiatory washing of his hands In presence of the multitude, to purge His soul, and thereof God alone is judge. BOOK THE FIFTH. 4g From the pure blood of that devoted Lamb. 830 Behold ! he cries, I pour this water forth. And therein make ablution of my soul From all participation in your crime, By washing of my hands from every stain Of this inhuman sacrifice, each spot 835 And sprinkling of this guiltless Victim's blood. Rest on your heads the murder ! I am clean. This said, he turn'd and fix'd a pitying look Upon the Lokd ; then sigh'd and gave the word : Eager as hounds, when slipp'd upon their prey, 840 In rush the throng, and soon the hissing scourge Whirl'd with impetuous swing aloud resounds Gashing that sacred flesh, whose bleeding stripes Heal'd our sin- wounded souls ; upon his brow A thorny crown tliey fix, whose tortu'ring spikes, Thnast rudely in by sacrilegious hands, 846 Furrow his temples and with crimson streams Cover his face divine : Him thus abus'd. 50 CALVARY. Mangled with stripes and all o'er bath'd in blood, In purple robe they scornfully array 850 And drag to public view Behold the man ! Pilate proclaira'd with horror in his voice And out-stretch'd arm, that pointed to a sight. Which had to pity mov'd their steely hearts, Had-lhey not been of metal forg'd by fiends 855 And temper'd in the sternest fires of hell. Dry-ey'd, as rock of adamant unmov'd. Obdurate to his sorrows they look'd on. Nor from their crucifying clamor ceas'd. Till Pilate, now all hope for Jesus lost, 860 Yielding to their tumultuous fury, cried. Take him and do your bloody work your:elves : Impose it not on me ; I find no cause Of death, no fault in Jesus. Take ye him And crucify him ! Of his guiltless blood 865 Lo ! I am innocent : see ye to that ! On us and on our children be his blood I BOOK THE FIFTH. 51 Then answer'd all the Jews. Tremendous words. Tremendously fulfiU'd ! And now afresh 869 They clamor for the cross ; when thus the judge Would you that I should crucify your king ? We have no king but Caesar, they rejoin. Nor art thou Csesar's-friend to spare this man*. 'Twas past ; to that dread name the Roman bow'd Obedient, and from his sad heart sigh'd forth 875 Th' extorted doom Death to the Lord of Life ! EKD OF THE FIFTH BOOK. CALYAMYs OR, Cfje Deatf) of Cftrigt. BOOK VI THE ARGUMENT OF THE SIXTH BOOK. Judas Iscariot sei-zcd %vith remorse returns the thirty pieces of silver to the priests and departs: Mammon re-assumes thehalit of a Levile, and meetinii Judas after he had relumed the vioney to the priests, instigates him to destroy himself. That evil spirit now lakes iciv^ and repairs to tlie wildrrness, con- venes the dcemons from all parts of Palestine, and informing them of Satan's expidsion from earth, warns them ly his command to betake thtmsclves to flight before the hour of Cltrist's crucifixion: This is no sooner announced than the whole infernal host breaks vp in disorder and disperses to various parts of the xvorld therein described. The subject of the Crucifixion is now brought forward : The procession sets out for Mount Calvary ; Christ bearing his cross is bcivailed by the spectators as he passes : He is seen by Gabriel and the angels with him from the mount, on which they were station- ed: He addresses himself to the daughters of Jerusalem: The cxecittioners nail his hands and feet to the cross ; the piiests revile him and call upon him to come down; one of the male- factors crucified with him casts the same in his teeth ; he is reproved by the other, whose penitence is rewarded by the pro- mise of immediate salvation and glory : Christ from the cross recommends his mother to John the beloved drsciple: Christ dies : The sun is darkened, the earth quakes, the rocks are renf, and the bodies of the saints and prophets are raised from the dead and appear vpon earth. ; The priests and elders, alarmed by these prodigies, resort to Pilate and demand a guard of Romans to defend the sepulchre, lest tlie disciples should take aivay the body of Christ, and pretend that he was risen : Pilate replies, that they have a watch ; bids them see to it themselves, and dismisses them- CAJLYAMY. BOOK VI. THE GKUCIFIXION. On us and on our children be his blood !" Such was your imprecation, O ye Jews, When in your sight the world's Redeemer stood Gash'd o'er with wounds, and emptying ev'ry vein For man's redemption; and behold ! it flows, 5 It whelms upon you in a flood-gate tide ; Steep'd to the lips ye are in all the blood Of all the righteous shed upon the earth. From blood of righteous Abel to the blood Of Zechariah, whom your fathers ston'd 10 Betwixt the altar and the house of God. Ye have enough ; the mark is on your race ; 56 CALVARY. Ye have drawn down the judgment ye provok'd. It rests upon you : Yet for you no rest. No station, no abiding-place is found ; 15 Strangers and weary wand'rers upon earth. If in the dust of your Jerusalem With foot proscribd ye dare to tread, ye die ; A savage race usurps your sacred mount. And Jordan echoes an unhallow'd name; 20 Should ye but stop to shed a filial tear Upon the soil where your forefathers sleep, Woe to tlie circumcis'd that so is found ! Oh ! slow of heart, when will ye understand. That thus afflicted, scatter'd and dispers'd 25 Through every clime and kingdom of the world Ye are sent forth to publish, as ye pass. How truly Christ predicted of your fate ; And though your hps deny, your sufferings prove That prophet Jesus, whom your fatlu^rs slew, 30 Was Savior, Christy Messias, Son of God, BOOK THE SIXTH. 5^ Amidst the throng that fiU'd the judgment-hall Stood Judas 3 he upon the watch to" avoid The Master's eye with caution took his post ; Yet was his ear to all that Jesus spake 35 Still present, and, though few the words, yet strong And potent of those few tlic' impressive truth. There was a magic sweetness in his voice, A note that seem'd to shiver' every nerve Entwin'd about his heart, though now corrupt, 40 Debasd and harden'd. Ill could he abide. Murderer although he were, the dying tones Of him, whom he had murder'd: 'Twas the voice As of a spirit in dae air by night Heard in the meditation of some crime 45 Or sleep-created in the troubled ear Of conscience, crying out. Beware ! It smote Upon the soul, for it was Christ who spake, Well then might Judas tremble ; 'twas the traitor Listning the plea of innocence betray'd, 50 58 CALVARY. Well might that plea awaken his remorse. When the perverting witnesses depos'd To crimes, of which he knew his Master free. The refutation quiver'd on his lips. And hard he struggled to bring forth the words, 55 Yet could not, tongue-ty'd with despair and shame. But if his hearing so alarm'd his heart, What were his feelings, when at times his eye Gianc'd on the sacred person of his Lord, Bound like a felon, his defenceless hands 6o In manacles confin'd behind his back. His cheeks with blows sufflated, and his face, Oh, piteous ! with blaspheming slaver stain'd ; Then stripp'd, transform'd, in purple stole array'd. Saluted with the insolent All-hail, 65 King of the Jews ! a spectacle of sport And merriment to all the scoffing crowd ? Could heart of man bear this, who had beheld His miracles, his mercies j prov'd his love. BOOK THE SIXTH. 59 His patience, his forbearance ; shar'd his cares, /O His labors and his watchings ; heard his voice. When tempest-tost, rebuke the elements, Though silent now amidst the roar of tongues ? 'Twas all that priestly malice could inflict, But more than Mammon's convert could support. Yet worse had these tormentors in reserve ^6 To agonize his soul, another scene To shift new horrors on that bloody stage : The torturing scourge now sounded in his ears. The mangled flesh flew off in tatter'd stripes, 80 The crimson stream ran down, the pavement drank Libation of his immolated blood : The hall rebellow 'd with the echoing cry Of monsters, who applauded every stroke, 84 Wolves,vultures,Oh,for words to speak them worse ! Men turn'd to daemons. Traitor though he were, Son of perdition^ this was all too much. Take hence, he cried, take back your bribe accurst. 60 CALVARY. Damn'd price of damning deed ! Tell oer your coin; Count out your thirty pieces, for each piece QO Is thirty thousand daggers to my heart : Burtlien'd too much already with my sins, I should but into worse damnation sink Under this mercenary load opprest. I have betray'd the innocent ; too late Q5 For pardon, I am past redemption lost ; Ye may redeem the time, if ye recall Your fatal condemnation and atone To tliat just person ye have doom'd to death ; If not, ye crucify the Lord of Life. 100 This said, he direw the thirty pieces down And strait departed 3 they to his retort Short answer made remorseless and malign. And now disburthen'd of his filthy bribe, 104 It seem'd as tliough his conscience would permit A momentar)' pause for one short gleam Qf hope to visit his benighted soul : BOOK THE SIXTH. 6l 'Twas soraetl)ing like atonement^ 'twas one step Turn'd backward from the precipice of sin And pointed tow'rds repentance} 'twas the last 110 Faint effort that reluctant nature made To struggle 'gainst self-murder ; but how vain ! For Mammon, once the tyrant of man's heart, 111 brooks expulsion thence, frorn youth to age. From age to life's extremest hour he holds 1 1 5 Absolute empire, nor does hell contain Spirit so jealous of usurp'd command. He in the bosoms of those impious priests Held high pre-eminence, and them amidst. Himself unseen, had noted all that pass'd ; 120 And much indignant to be now abjur'd Of that compunctious traitor, swift as thought, Such was his power of motion, took the form And habit of that Levite first assum'd, And him close following to the outward hall, 125 There with these taunting* words assail'd his ear. 62 CALVARY. A losing game, friend JudaSj thou hast play'd To set thy soul upon a desperate cast. And after pay the stake on either side. What folly is it to be knave by halves ! 130 Who would strike virtue in the face, and then Ask pardon for the blowj fall off from truth, Enlist with falsehood and take pay for treason, Then by a paltry plea of restitution Think to compound one trespass by another, 135 Desertion by desertion ? Get thee hence. Thou shame to manhood ! wring out the sad dregs Of thy detested life in hopeless tears, For thou hast thrown away both worlds at once ; All gain in this, all glory in the next. 140 And what art thou, cried Judas, so to gall A wounded spirit, wounded by thy arts, Tempter accurst ? Human thou canst not be. Else thou wouldst iind some pity in thy heart For wretch like me. Who but thvself seduc'd M5 BOOK THE SIXTH. 63' My loyalty from Christ ? Who sapp'd my faith ? Who fix'd this adder to my breast but thou ? Thou, daemon as thou art, hast hurl'd me down From my high hope to fathomless abyss Of misery and despair, from heav'n to hell. 150 Rail not on me, quoth Mammon, but thyself And thine own folly : there the charge were just. Didst thou not sell thy Master for a bribe ? My part was faithfully perform'd ; fhe price 154 Condition'd for was paid. What wouldst thou more ? I needed treason, and I sought out thee As fittest for my purpose : Envious, proud, Lustful of pelf, a villain ready-made And ripe for mischief, such I mark'd thee down ; Nay, and yet better ; for I thought thee whole l60 And perfect villain with no rotten part Of penitence to mar tliee ; but, behold. Thou hast deceiv'd me vilely, and hast got A blinking vice about thee, a perverse 64 CALVARY. And retrograde depravity of soul, 165 That makes thee hateful to my sight : Begone ! That thou art wicked put not me to blame ; Hadst thou been constant I had made thee rich. And riches would have sav'd thee from contempt ; Now thou art poor and loathsome. Hence ; avaunt ! One remedy I'll give thee for despair, 171 This cord, a remnant of thy Master's bonds ; A legacy most opportunely left To heal thy cares and recompence thy love : Take, and apply it to it's proper use ; 175 It tied his limbs : Let it encase thy throat. He saidj and stooping, from the pavement took The cord there left, and hurling it with scorn To the desponding traitor disappear'd : Nor did that wretch the fatal gift reject, 180 But eager seiz'd the instrument of death. And soon within a darksome vault beneatli The judgment-hall fit solitude he found BOOK THE SIXTH. 65 And beam appropriate to his desperate use ; Whereto appendent he breath'd out his soul, 185 Not daring to put up one prayer for peace At his dark journey's end ; but trembling, wild, Confus'd, of reason as of hope bereft, With heaving breast and ghastly staring eyes There betwixt heav'n and earth, of both renounc'd, Hung terrible to sight, a bloated corpse. IQl Oh ! how shall rash and ignorant man presume To judge for God, and on his narrow scale Think to mete out by limits and degrees Immeasurable mercy ? Who can tell igs How high the sorrows of man's suffering heart Ascend tow'rds heav'n, how swift contrition flies. What words find passage to the throne of grace, What in mid- way are lost, dispers'd in air And scatter'd to the winds ? Oh I that my harp 200 Could sound that happy note, which stirs the string Responsive, that kind Nature hath entwin'd 66 CALVARY. About the human heart, and by whose clue Repentance, heav'nly moni tress, reclaims The youthfial wanderer from his dang'rous maze To tread her peaceful paths and seek his God : 206 So could my fervent my effectual verse Avail, posterity should then engrave That verse upon my tomb to tell the world 1 did not live in vain. But heedless man, 2 JO Deaf to the music of the moral song, By Mammon or by Belial led from sin To sin, runs onward in his mad career. Nor once takes warning of his better guide. Till at the barrier of life's little span 215 Arriv'd, he stops : Death opens to his view A hideous gulph ; in vain he looks around For the lost seraph Hope ; beside him stands The tyrant fiend and urges to the brink ; Behind him black despair with threat'ning frown And gorgon shield, whose interposed orb 221 BOOK THE SIXTH. Q7 Bars all retreat, and with it's shade involves Life's brighter prospects in one hideous night. So Judas fell ; so like him every wretch, By the same filthy Mammon lur'd, shall fall. 225 Meanwhile the vengeful daemon unappeas'd, Pond'ring the warning of his Stygian Lord Late driv'n from earth, and mindful that the charge And conduct of hell's host on him devolv'd Now claim'd his wariest thought, upon the wing 230 Sets forth full sail to summon his compeers. As many' as in that quarter might be found. And them apprize of their foul loss incurr'd By their great captain's fall, and what dispatch Behoves them now put forth timely to 'scape 235 Impending danger of their chief foreseen. If Christ's death-hour should unawares surprize Them idly station'd, or with curious gaze - Hovering about his cross. So forth he goes ; But first to spy the land he wheels his flight 240 68 CALVARY. Athwart Mount Calvary, and there on guard A file of heav'nly warriors he descries Covering the sacred hill, and at their head Gabriel in golden panoply array'd, Arm'd at all points, commander of the band. 245 The fate of Satan, and the recent sight Of Chemos' ghastly wound, with guilty fears Haunting his coward fancy, warn'd him fly Beyond tlie range of that strong spear, from which Spirit more warlike than himself had fled. 250 As when a pirate galley on the scout. Roving the seas of some strong-guarded coast, In bay or inlet moor'd under the lea Of headland promontory' at anchor spies A warlike fleet, whose tow 'ring masts and sails 255 Arrang'd for sea bespeak their ready trim, Down goes the helm at once, the felon crew Bestir all hands and veer the vessel round To seaward, then ply oars and sails for life : BOOK THE SIXTH. 69 So at the sight of that angelic band 260 The Stygian scout wheel'd round and sped his flight Sheer to the wilderness on swiftest wing. There on the watch Azazel haply found He bade sound forth the loud Satanic trump, Heard through all Palestine, at call whereof 265 Spi'rits, to whatever element affix'd. In troops swift posting on the charmed winds. Came from all parts ; from Sidon and from Tyre New ris'n amidst the waves ; from Gaza's coast. Meridian limit, to the snow-capt mounts 27O Hermon and Libanus, and them beyond From Epidaphne on Orontes' stream, Fam'd for it's grove prophetic ; from the banks Of Pharphar and Abana, Kiramon's haunts ; From Byblus, where Astarte's wanton train 2/5 Howl for the death of Thammuz, yearly lost And found as oft by tlie love-frantic dames. These on the desert heath alighting stand VOL. II. F 70 CALVARY. Obedient to the signal 3 all around Expectant of their arch-angelic chief 260 They cast an anxious look, but look in vain : Him in far other region they shall find In chains fast bound amidst eternal fires. His dismal dwelling, for them also' reserv'd In God's appointed time. To whom the fiend. 285 I muse not, warriors, that ye stand amaz'd To see yourselves in absence of our chief Here summon'd by his arch-angelic trump. Which other breath than his before ne'er fill'd ; But public danger urges this bold step, 29O In me presumptuous, had I not to plead Your safety for my warrant, and withal His last sad mandate earnestly bequeath'd At parting, when sole witness I beheld His utter loss, discomfiture and flight. 2Q5 All, friends ! how sympathetic with my soul Is that deep general groan, which now I hear ! BOOK THE SIXTH. 71 Full cause, immortal mourners, have we all To groan and beat our breasts, nor I the least. Whose melancholy task it is to pour 300 These heavy tidings in your grieved ears. But let us yet remember what we are. And be not therefore heartless, though bereft Of him, who was the head and brain of all . Many and mighty are the chiefs yet left, 305 Though he prime chief no longer shall review This widow'd host. Of Satan the return Is desp'rate, such a whirlwind caught him up, So strong a southern blast at Christ's command Blew him beyond the stretch of angel ken 310 Right onward to the realm of ancient Night Impetuous through the empyrean void Sheer on the level wing. Of him the fate Is worse than doubtful ; of his Victor's power And Godhead irresistible what proof 315 Greater than this sad downfall can we need, n C A L V A R Y. Or after such example what provoke ? Behoves us now prepare for instant flight ; This our late chief, prophetic in his fall, AVith his last words enjoin'd me to propound 320 To these our legions scatter'd o'er the coasts Of Palestine, whom else the coming hour Of Christ's mysterious passion shall involve In like disgrace and ruin with your prince, Who to his latest moment upon earth 325 Was studious of your safety. I have now In words unworthy of my charge, yet such As heart o'erwhelm'd with sorrow can supply. Surrender 'd to your ears tny painful trust. But whitlier to repair, whom to elect 330 As captain and conductor of this host, Now headless, conscious that such high command With none but witli the worthiest should be lodg'd, I, as becomes me, to your wiser thoughts Submit, and with tlie general choice shall close. 335 BOOK THE SIXTH. 73 No more, for now with sudden panic seiz'd. The Stygian host, no voice imperial heard Nor rule nor order kept, uprose at once Disbanded, lawless ; dreadful was the yell Of that infernal rout, a swarm as thick 340 As locusts, making horrid night beneath Their wings, tliat with Hke clangor beat the air. As of a flock of cormorants disturb'd From some lone island on the rocky coast Of Chili, where they haunt ; so they with cry 345 More hideous mount, there hover for a while. Then to all points disperse, as chance falls out. Or short consult prescribes. Some to the South "With Isis and Osiris at their head To Memphis, Thin andTamis take their flight ; 350 There widi the bestial deities to herd. Birds, serpents, reptiles, monsters of the Nile, Gods that would half unfurnish Noah's ark ; Some with Melcartus, demi-god of Tyre, 7'i CALVARY. Light short, and in his temple refuge take, 355 Where arm'd with massy club and lion hide His huge athletic idol frowning stands : Otliers with Rimmon eastward wing tlieir way To fam'd Damascus ; there in bow'ring shades By rilling fountains on the flowery turf 3t)0 To doze away the soft oblivious hours, A slumb'ring synod : Some the golden spires Of Nineveh attract and Nisroc's fane, Stain'd with Sennacherib's imperial blood. There by the parricidal princes shed : 365 To Byblus and Belitus others speed. Light feathery wantons by Astarte led "With loose love-ditties and soft smiles lur'd on To page her pride and deck her amorous sports : But of the rest far greater part repair 3/0 To high Olympus, where presides the power Of thundering Baiil ; he tliat station keeps Pre-eminent o'er all tlie idol gods, BOOK THE SIXTH. 75 And in his festive hall rich nectar quaffs With purple lips, and midnight revels holds 3/5 Luxurious, sensual, lewd, in vice immers'd ; Yet some there were and of no vulgar note. Who, grief to tell ! to the biforked mount Flew off, and there with the Parnassian maids Held shameful dalliance, from whose lewd embrace Descended a whole family of bards 381 Corruptive, illegitimate and bascj A spurious breed of wickedness and wit ; A Muse's genius with a Daemon's heart : Mammon meanwhile, a solitary sprite, 385 Selfish, morose and ev'n by dev'ils abhor'd. Hied him alone, on sordid thoughts intent. To rummage in Pactolus' sands for gold ; None join'd, nor sought he partner in his flight. His sole ambition to engross and hoard. 39O Now came the awful consummation on. The hour of promise, dimly shadow'd out 7Q CALVAIiy.. '- ' ' ' I By types and prophecies, when from the womb Of mystery, long travailing in pains And groanings, now in ripe time should spring forth Her full form'd revelation to dispel 3C,G Th' Obscure of antient days and usher in Twin birth of Immortahty and Life. Now God by the' off' ring of his only Son The type of Abraham's sacrifice fulfill 'd, 400 Who, though unconscious of that type, by faith Righteous, was of the promises made heir. And now, as Moses in the wilderness Lifted the serpent, so the Son of man Exalted en tlie cross shall heal the world -105 Of sin, and expiate tlie wide wasting plague. Now the peace-offering of the spotless Lamb Ey one conclusive Passover shall rend The law's symbolic veil, and all absolve. Whose consciences are sprinkled with his blood, 4 10 I'rom punishment entail'd uj>on the \vorld BOOK THE SIXTH, 1^ By man's first disobedience. Forth He comes From condemnation : Ye too from your tombs Come forth, ye prophets ! Son of Amoz, thou Prepare for resurrection : Come and see, 415 Not darkly' as in a glass, but face to face, The object of thy vision ; Him, the man Of sorrows ; Him, who like a lamb is brought To slaughter : Mark the travail of his soul ; Witness how he is stricken for our sins, 420 Witness how we are healed by his stripes. And by the note and comment of his death Construe thine own predictions. Forth becomes From condemnation under Roman guard. Bearing his cross : Upon his bleeding brow, 425 Ensign alike of royalty and woe, A thorny crown ; no friendly hand is found To wipe away the tear mingled with blood. That hangs vipon his cheek: The soldiers cry, Room for the criminal ! and rest their pikes 430 78 CALVARY. To keep the crowd aloof ; staggering beneath The ponderous burthen of his cross he faints And sinks to earth o'erspent, till one is found, A sturdy stranger of Cyrenean birth. On whom to lay the venerable load. 435 Hail, Simon ! blessed above men wert thou. If faith in Him that suffer'd on that cress Glow'd in thy heart and furnish'd thee with zeal To render this last service to thy Lord. Without the city walls there was a mount 4-10 Call'd Calvary : The common grave it was Of malefactors ; there to plant his cross It was decreed : Long was the way to death. And like the ascent to glory hard to climb. Upon the summit stood the Angel troop 445 Of Mammon seen, though to man's filmed eye Invisible: Here Gabriel from the heighth Noting tlie sad pi-ocession, had espied The sutlcring Son of God amidst the throng BOOK THE SIXTH. 79 Dragg'd slowly on by rude and ruffian hands 450 To shameful execution : Horror-struck, Pierc'd to the heart th' indignant Seraph shooK His threat'ning spear, and with the other hand Smote on his thigh in agony of soul For man's ingratitude : glisfning with tears 455 His eyes, whence late celestial sweetness beam'd, Now shot a fiery glance on them below, Then, raising them to heav'n, he thus exclaim'd : Oh ! that the Everlasting would permit His Angels to chastise these impious men, 460 And from their hands his holy Son redeem. Whom in the heav'n of heav'ns we have beheld Beloved of tlie Father, ever blest. At the right hand of Pow'r in glory thron'd ! But this for purposes beyond our reach 465 God ever wise forbids, and who against God's interdict shall stir? Thej-efore retire. Stand off and wait the time ! If Christ commands. 80 CALVARY. We are his ministers to do his will. Be it to lift this mountain from it's base 4/0 And whelm it on his murderers ; if not. Patient spectators we must here abide And let the sacrilegious work proceed ; Knowing that God hath said, I will revenge : Vengeance belongeth to the Lord alone. 475 Now on the news of their great Prophet's fate Each heart witli fearfulness and trembling seiz'd. Through all Jerusalem the tumult ran ; Native or stranger, aged or infirm. None in the Holy City now kept house : 480 AVhere'er the Savior pass'd his presence drew Tliousands to gaze ; and many' an aching heart Heav'd silent the last tributarj' sigh In memory of his mercies ; zealous some llush'd in tlie grateful blessing to bestow 485 For health or limbs or life itself restor'd : Put these the soldiers rudely thrust aside. BOOK THE SIXTH, 81 And some with brutal violence they smote, Thick'ning their files to hem their Pris'ner close. As fearful of a rescue. Loud the cry 4Q0 Of women, whose soft sex to pity prone Melts at those scenes, which flinty-hearted man Dry-ey'd contemplates : Mothers in their arms Held up their infants, and with shrill acclaim Begg'd a last blessing for those innocents, 4Q5 Whose sweet simplicity so well he lov'd. And ever as he met them laid his hands Upon their harmless heads with gentle love And gracious benediction, breathing heav'n 499 Into their hearts. Oh ! happy babes, so blest ! [round Fenc'd in with shields and spears and compass'd With Roman guards the persecuting priests. Elders and scribes foUow'd their Victim's steps Amidst the scotTs and hissings of the crowd ; And still as Christ approach'd the fatal spot 505 Loud and more loud the sad lamentings grewj 82 CALVARY. Till at the foot of the funereal mount Arriv'd he stopt, and, turning to the group Of mourners, these prophetic words address'd : Daughters of Solyma, weep not for me, 5 10 Weep rather for yourselves and for your babes ; For lo ! the dawn of sorrows is at hand ; The dread prediction presses to the birth. When through Jerusalem a voice shall cry Give thanks, ye childless matrons, and confess 515 A barren bed, your worst misfortune deem'd. Now your best blessing : Break forth into joy, Ye, at whose breasts no infant ever hung, P'or ye have none to mourn. Now to the clefts And caverns of the mountains they shall sny, 520 Fall on us, cover us, yc rocky vaults. And hide us from this wrath ! For if with us Already It begins, what shall the end Of the ungodly and tlic sinner be ? If llic frreen tree cannot abide the storm, 525 BOOK THE SIXTH. 83 How shall the dry escape ? And now no more : Upon the summit of Mount Calvary They rear his cross ; conspicuous there it stands An ensign of salvation to the world. Kneel, all ye Christian nations ! bow your hearts 530 And worship your Redeemer, in whose death Ye live, and from whose issuing wounds flows life. By his blood purchas'd ; hope's best promise flows Of joys immortal for the just reserv'd. The soldiers, now by their centurion form'd 535 In hollow orb around the cross, begin Their horrid prelude to the murd'rous scene; And first his vesture, their accustom'd spoil And perquisite, they part ; but for his coat From top to bottom woven without seam, 540 That they rend not, but on it cast their lots Whose it shall be entire. Upon his cross In Hebrew, Greek and Latin they inscribe. So Pilate will'd though by the priests oppos'd. 84 CALVARY. " Jesus ofNazareth, King of the Jews!" 545 This title, in three several tongues display'd. Read all those crucifiers of their King And murmur'd as they read ; hard to the last. Obdurate, unbelieving. Now began The executioners to spread his arms 550 Upon the beam transverse, and through his palms. Monsters of cruelty! and through his feet They drove their spiked nails ; whilst at the clang Of those dire engines every feeling heart Utter'd a groan, that with the mingled shrieks 555 Of mothers and of children pierc'd the air. The priests and elders gnash'd their teeth for rage And rancorous spite to hear him so bewail'd : Women dropt down convuls'd and on the spot Let fall their burthens immature for birili. 560 Words fail to paint the horrors of that scene : The very soldiers paus'd and stood aghast, IMusing what these lamentings might portend j BOOK THE SIXTH. 85 Scarce daf'd tliey to pursue the dreadful work Awe-struck and gazing on the face divine 565 Of the suspended Savior. He, tliough stretch'd Upon the rack of agony, to heav'n Raising his eyes Father of mercy, cried, Forgive them, for they know not what they do ! O ruthless murderers ! could ye hear these words And yet persist ? Blasphemers! can ye read 5^1 And not adore ? The people stand at gaze : The rulers eager to provoke anew Their quailing resolution with one voice Cry out amain Ah I thou, that on the cross SJS Now hangest, thou, that boastedst to destroy Our temple and rebuild it in three days. Where art thou ? If thou be the very Christ, The King of Israel, now come down, descend And save thyself j this seeing, we will then 580 Confess thee and believe. But 'tis in vain : He hears not, he replies not, he expires : VOL, II. G 86 CALVARY. Others he sav'd } himself he cannot save. Peace, peace, revilers ! nor expect reply : Think not that Christ, thus dying for mankind, "Will from his great commission turn aside 586 And stop the sacrifice and quit the cross, On which his body offer 'd up for sin As on an altar lies. Your taunts he hears ; Yet will he not descend call'd down by you, 5Q0 Nor at the door of death shrink back and leave Short of perfection his all-glorious work. But wait the time, and greater sign than this Ye shall behold, when rising from the dead And incorruptible he shall return 5Q5 On earth triumphant o'er the cross and deatli. Yet such is the perverseness of your hearts. Him nor descending would ye now believe. Nor re-ascending will ye then confess. And now behold ! on either side the cross OOO Of Christ a wretched malefactor hunsj BOOK THE SIXTH. 87 Groaning and writhing in the pangs of death : "When one of these, encourag'd by the taunts Of the reviling priests, scornful exclaims Hear'st thou not what they say ? If thou be Christ, Why art thou in this torture ? Save thyself, 606 And us thy fellows from this cross redeem- This when his penitent companion heard New horrors smote his heart, his fault' ring voice He rais'd, and thus the blasphemy rebuk'd : 6lO Hast thou no fear of God, expiring wretch ? Stretch'd as thou art upon the tree of death, Hast thou no terror for the wrath to come ? And truly we the merited reward Of our ill deeds receive, but this just Man, 615 What hath he done ? In hun no fault is found. This said, the penitent with faith inspir'd Upon the Savior turn'd his dying eyes. And Lord ! he cried with supplicating voice. When to thy heav'nly kingdom thou shalt come, 620 88 CALVARY. Oh tlien remember me ! To him tlie Lord I tell thee of a truth this very day Thou shalt be found in Paradise with me. Oh ! words of Joy, that breathe into the ear Of the expiring penitent the pledge 625 Of pardon and acceptance : Words, that waft The soul yet hovering on tlie lips of faith Into the heav'n of heav'ns, with grateful heart We hail the glorious promise, which unfolds The gates of bliss and present entrance gives 630 To the repentant sinner. Now no more Conjecture ponders on the life to come ; Our dying Savior draws aside the veil, Through which dim reason caught a doubtful glimpse Of shadowy realms, that stretch'd beyond the grave, Elysian scenes in clouds and mist involv'd. 636 Yet with this comfort take the caution loo ; For who shall say what penitence was his, That carn'd this promise ? Fatally he tns. BOOK THE SIXTH. 89 Whosehope fore-runs repentance,whopresumes 640 That God will pardon when he's tir'd of sin And like a stale companion casts it off. Oh ! arrogant, delusive, impious thought. To meditate commodious truce with Heaven, When death's swiftarrow smites him unprepar'd, 645 And that protracted moment never comes. Or comes too late : Turn then, presumptuous man. Turn to the other sinner on tlie cross, Who died reviling, there behold thy doom ! Thou, too, the Virgin Mother of our Lord, 650 By the angelic salutation hail'd Blest above women, thou amidst the group Of sympathising mourners at that hour Wast present, when th' incarnate Virtue, born Of thine immac'ulate womb, impregn'd ofHeav'n, Hung on tlie cross expiring : He from thence 65 S On, thee disconsolate a dying look Of tenderest pity cast, and at thy side go CALVARY. Noting the meek disciple whom he lov'd. Thus both address'd. Woman, behold thy son : 660 Son, look upon thy mother ! Sacred charge And piously fulfiU'd. Now darkness fell On all the region round ; the shrowded sun From the impen'itent earth withdrew liis light; I thirst ! the Savior cried, and lifted up 665 His eyes in agony My God, my God ! Ah ! why hast thou forsaken me ? exclaim'd. Yet deem him not forsaken of his God : Beware that error : 'Twas the mortal part Of his compounded nature breathing forth 6/0 It's last sad agony, that so complain'd : Doubt not that veil of sorrow was withdrawn. And heav'nly comfort to his soul vouchsaf d. Ere thus he cried Fatlier ! into thy hands My spirit 1 commend : Then bow'd his head 6/5 And died. Now Gabriel and his heav'nly choir Of minist'ring angels hov'ring o'er the cross BOOK THE SIXTH. 91 Receiv'd his Spi'rit, at length from mortal pangs And fleshly pris'on set free, and bore it thence Upon their wings rejoicing. Then behold 680 A prodigy, that to tlie world announc'd A new religion and dissolv'd the old : The temple's sacred vail was rent in twain From top to bottom 'midst th' attesting shocks Of earthquake and the rending up of graves : 685 Now those mysterious symbols, heretofore Curtain'd from vulgar eyes and holiest deem'd Of holies were display'd to public view : The mercy-seat with its cherubic wings O'ershadow'd and the golden ark beneatli 69O Covering the testimony now through the rent Of tliat dissever'd vail first saw the light. A world redeem'd had now no further need Of types and emblems dimly shadowing forth An angry Deity withdrawn from sight 6Q5 And canopied in clouds : Him face to face 02 CALVARY. Now in full light reveal'd the dying breath Of his dear Son appeas'd, and purchased peace And reconcilement for offending man. Thus the partition wall, by Moses built, 7OO By Christ was level'd and the Gntile world Enter'd the breach by their great Captain led Up to the throne of grace, opening himself Through his own flesh a new and living way. Then were the oracles of God made known 703 To all the nations, sprinkled by the blood Of Jesus and baptizd into his death ; So was the birth-right of the elder-bom. Heirs of the promise, forfeited ; whilst they, Whom sin had erst in bondage held, made free 71 From sin and servants of the living God, Now gain'd the gift of God, Eternal life. Soon as these signs and prodigies were seen Of those who watch'd the cross, conviction smote Their fear-struck hearts : The sun at noon-day dark. BOOK THE SIXTH. 93 The earth convulsive underneath their feet, 716 And the firm rocks in shiver'd fragments rent Rous'd them at once to tremble and believe. Then was our Lord by heathen lips confess'd. When the centurion cried In very truth 720 This righteous person was the Son of God The rest in heart assenting stood abash"d. Watching in silence the tremendous scene : The recollection of his gracious acts. His dying pray'rs and their own impious taunts 725 Now rose in sad review ; too late they wish'd The deed undone and sighing smote their breasts. Strait from God's presence went that Angel forth. Whose trumpet shall call up the sleeping dead At the last day, and bade the Saints arise 730 And come on earth to hail this promis'd hour. The day-spring of Salvation. Forth they came From their dark tenements, their shadowy forms Made visible as in their fleshly state, 94 CALVARY. And through the Holy City here and there 735 Frequent they gleam' d, by night, by day with fear And wonder seen of many : Holy seers. Prophets and martyrs from the grave set free, And the first-fruits of the redeemed dead. They, who with Christ transfigur'd on the mount Were seen of his disciples in a cloud 741 Of dazzling glory, now in form distinct Mingling amidst the public haunts of men. Struck terror to all hearts : Ezekiel there, The captive seer, to whom on Chebar's banks 7"^^ The heav'ns were opened and the fatal roll Held forth with dire denunciations fiU'd Of lamentation, mourning and of woe. Now falling fast on Israel's wretched race : He too was there, Hilkiah's holy son, 750 With loins close girt and glowing lips of fire By God's own finger touch'd: There might be seen The youthful prophet, Beltcshazzar nam'd BOOK THE SIXTH. gs Of the Chaldees, interpreter of dreams, Knowledge of God bestow'd, in visions skill'd, ^55 And fair and learn'd and wise : The Baptist here Girt in his hairy mantle frowning stalk'd. And, pointing to his ghastly wound, exclaim" d Ye vipers ! whom my warning could not move Timely to flee from the impending wrath, 7^0 Now fallen on your heads ; whom I indeed With water, Christ hath now with fire baptiz'd: Barren ye were of fruits, which I prescrib'd Meet for repentance, and behold ! the axe Is laid to the unprofitable root 7^5 Of every sapless tree, hewn down, condemn'd And cast into the fire. Lo ! these are they. These shadowy forms now floating in your sight. These are the harbingers of antient days, Who witness'd the Messias and announc'd 770 His coming upon earth. Mark with what scorn Silent they pass you by : Them had ye heard. ^6 CALVARY. Them had ye noted with a patient mind. Ye had not crucified the Lord of Life : He of these stones to Abraham shall raise up 775 Children, than you more worthy of his stock ; And now his winnowing fan is in his hand. With which he'll purge his floor, and having stor'd The precious grain in garners, will consume With fire unquenchable the refiise chaff. 780 Thus the terrific Vision in the ears Of the astonish'd multitude declaim'd [hearts ; With threat'ning voice, and wrung their conscious Whilst the blaspheming priests, who in their scorn Triumphant saw the Savior of tlie world 735 Expiring on the cross and deem'd him lost, Now by the resurrection of the saints, Usher'd on earth with prodigies and signs. Confounded and amaz'd, began to doubt If yet the sepulchre had power to keep 790 It's crucified Possessor safe in hold. BOOK THE SIXTH. g? And with tliese thoughts perplex'd masking their fears Under pretence of caution, they repair To Pilate and demand a Roman guard To watch the tomb of Christ, and then they add For we remember that Deceiver said, ^QQ Whilst he was yet alive, after three days I will again arise j therefore we pray Command the sepulchre to be made sure Till the third day, lest his disciples come 800 By night and craftily remove him thence 5 So the last error shall outgo the first. But Pilate, whose unrighteous judgment still Sate heavy on his heart, had little care For what might them befall, and to their suit 805 Briefly reply'd Why do ye ask of me That custody, which in yourselves ye have ? Take your own watch and to their charge commit The safeguard of that body, which, though dead, 98 CALVARY. Keeps yet alive your fears: 'Tis your own cause, 810 As such I leave it with you ; so begone ! He said and turn'd aside, nor did they tempt Further discourse, but murmr'ing went their way. END OF THE SIXTH BOOK. CAILYAMY Cfje Cheats of Cfjngt. BOOK VII. THE ARGUMENT OF THE SEVENTH BOOK. TTiis Book opens with the scene of Mount Calvary at the coming on of evening', Christ still hanging dead upon the cross, th( disciples standi7ig apart and the holy women watching amongst whom is the Blessed Virgin supported hy St. Jolin Christ having bequeathed her to his care : His address to Aei 071 this sulject, and her reply. The soldiers come and breal the legs of the two malefactors, but finding Christ already dead, they pierce his heart icith a spear, and blood and wate^ issues from the wound : they take him down from the crosi and lay him in the sepulchre. His spirit in the meamvhili is conveyed by the angels into the region of Death ; thai region desciibed, and the distant prospect of the bottoinlcst pit, whei'e the souls of the wicked are in torment ; Christ points out these scenes to Gabriel, and instructs him as to tin future objects of his descent into this gloomy region. Satar, expelled from earth falls prostrate at the foot of the throjie oj Death ; he snakes suit to that power for protection ; Death rejects his intercessions ; the person and palace of the King of Terrors described ; the triumphant entry of Christ ; Satan is hurled into the bottomless pit, and there bound by tht strong angel ; the horrors of that dreadful abode are repre- sented; Death humbles himself before the Redeemer of man- kind, and conscious that his power is overthrown, tenders his croivn to Christ as to his conqueror ; He lays the key at his feet, which sets free the souls of the saints, v;ho are destined to be partakers of the first resurrection ; this key is given to Gabriel with instructions for their release ; Christ in his reply to Death fureivar ns him of his doom, but signifies to him that the dissolution of his power will not be iniviediale. The approach (f the Saints concludes the Book. CAJLYAmY. BOOK VIL THE DESCENT INTO HELL. xS ow Hesperus renew' d his evening lamp And hung it forth amid the turbid sky To mark the close of this portentous day: The lab'ring sun, in his mid course-eclips'dj Darkling at length had reach'd his western goal ; 5 And now it seem'd as if all Nature slept O'erspent and wearied with convulsive throes. Upon his cross the martyr'd Savior hung ; [corpse Pale through the twilight gleam'd his breathless And silvery white, as when the moon-beam plays 1 On the smooth surface of the glassy lake ; His tliorn-crown'd head upon his breast reclin'd ; VOL II. H 102 CALVARY. His arms were wide out spread, as if in act To' embrace and welcome the converted world : So were they late expanded, when he cried 15 Come all ye heavy laden, come to me, And I will give you rest ! Death had not dar'd To rob those features of one heav'nly grace. Nor had the worm authority to taint That incorruptible and hallow'd shrine, 20 Wherein his purity had deign'd to dwell. The living saints here mingling with the dead Stood round in pensive meditation rapt, Silent spectators of the aweful scene : There his disciples in a group apart, 25 Like frighted sheep that cluster in a storm, Throng'd each on other interchanging looks Of sorrow and despair ; no voice was heard. No utterance but of sighs; though all had need Of comfort, none had comfort to bestow. 30 But Peter, in whose self-accusing breast BOOK THE SEVENTH. 103 Grief roll'd in tempests, had the whilst chos'n out A solitary spot, where at his length Outstretch'd with face incumbent on the ground He lay like one whom fortune had cast off, 35 Of all hope 'reft, most wretched and forlorn. There too the holy Mother might be seen. Like Rizpah, watching o'er her murder'd son. Rooted in earth, a monument of woe. Beside her, bath'd in sympathising tears, 40 First in his Master's love, as meek of soul. Stood John, adopted by his dying Lord Son and supporter of that mournful Saint, At length with reverend love he turn'd his eyes . Upon the Virgin Mother and thus spake. 45 Oh tliou ! participant witli God himself In his incarnate Offspring, if I claim The glorious title, which my dying Lord On me, thy servant ever, now thy son, Gracious bcqueath'd, let not my words offend. 50 J04 CALVARY. High honor and a trust than life more dear Hath Christ by tliis adoption deign'd to cast On me unmeriting ; yet well I heard Those sacred words IMother^ behold thy son ; Son, look upon thy mother ! ^Yes^ I heard, 55 And treasuring in my heart the rich bequest, Bow'd and obey'd : Ev'n then my zeal had spoke The dictates of devotion, had 1 dar'd To break tlie aweful silence of that hour, Or sacrilegiously divert the ear 60 Of mute attention, whilst those lips divine. Those living oracles, had breath to move ; Now mute, alas ! for He is now no more. Who had the words of life : Our hope is quench'd, Our glory vanish'd. See ! tlie deed is done : 65 Those murderers have kill'd the Prince of Peace, Cold on the cross and stift'ning in the wind To the rude elements his corp-e is leftj Nor is tliere found, who shall provide a grave 6^ BOOK THE SEVENTH. 105 For the sad reliques of the Son of God. [mourn'd But lo ! the heav'ns, that three long hours have In darkness, now throw of their sable shroud : The earth no longer quakes beneath our feet, The shattered rocks subside ; Nature is calm. The sun unmasks, and through disparted clouds ^5 "With ruddy twilight streaks the western sky. And may not we, since God hath now withdrawn His terrors and asswag d the wrathful sky. May not we hope, that as his light revives At the third hour, so of his blessed Son 80 The promis'd resurrection to new life At the third day shall also come to pass ? "When, as the sun emerging from eclipse Darkness dispells, so Christ from out the grave Arising shall dispell our dark despair ? 85 To him the holy mother thus replied : Thou meek Disciple, in thy Master's love Pre-eminently blest, since He, whose will ]06 CALVARY. Should govern, so decrees it, from this hour Henceforth I lodge thee in a mother's heart pO And hold thee as my son : for I perceive Christ from his human nature is withdrawn, And to mortality hath render'd back All that from me a mortal he receiv'd : His Incorruptible now lives with God, Q5 And in tliat glory I no part must claim ; Flesh cannot share with spirit. Henceforth thou. Thou art my son adopted in the place Of that incarnate Virtue, of whose birth Miraculous the eastern star gave sign, 100 And Angels witness'd him the Son of God. And now behold ! what wonders mark his death : Whence are these prodigies ? What but the hand Of God can shake the pillars of the earth, Seal up the sun and rend these rocks in twain, 105 Turn day to night, tear down the temple vail. Break up the graves and bid the saints come forth ? BOOK THE SEVENTH. 107 Lo, where they pass as sensible to sight As in broad day substantial man to man. And can we ask if He be very Christ, 1 10 Whom stars and Angels usher'd into birth ? Can we doubt him on whom the Spi'rit of God Dove-like descended ? Can we stop our ears Against a voice from heaven ? Are we so blind, Dull and insensible not to behold 115 That sun emergent, and these moving shapes. That to revisit earth have left their graves, Awaken'd as from sleep ? If these can rise, If these, whose bones are moulder'd into dust. On whom the worm hath fed for ages, men 1 20 As mortal as ourselves can re -ascend Out of the pit, do not these signs bespeak His second coming, who is Lord and Christ ? He shall. He shall return upon the earth Victorious over death, and we, though now 125 Humbled in heart and for a season sad. 108 CALVARY. Yet wavering not in faith and holding fast The anchor of our hope^ shall yet again Behold his glory, and as now his death Turns day to night, his resurrection then 130 Shall into joy convert our present gloom. But see, where Peter prostrate on the earth Is lost in sorrow : Haste and bid him rise j Tell him the day's at hand when he must work. Hath he not heard the servant shall not sleep 135 In his Lord's absence ? Strengthen thou his heart ! So spake these Saints, and each to other gave i\lternate solace ; faith inspiring hope. And hope asswaging woe. At Peter's side Behold the meek disciple Up ! he cries, 140 Awake and put on strength : The Virgin Saint, The Mother of our Lord, bids thee awake. Unprofitable grief availeth nought, But godly sorrow is approv'd in works Meet for repentance. Up ! for Christ, tlio' dead. BOOK THE SEVENTH. 109 Yet speaketh, and shall come again on earth : 146 Woe to that servant therefore, whom his Lord Shall find thus sleeping ; great shall be his wrath. This said, he reach'd his hand and rais'd him up : He stood and spake^ Servant, of Christ approv'd. Thee and thy blessed Sender I obey : 151 Yet doth my heart, by deep remorse subdued. Press downward to the dust. A wretch I am. Who hath denied his Lord : What can I do, A miserable man ? O righteous John, 155 When thou shalt spread abroad, as sure thou wilt. The direful doings of this fatal day, And publish to mankind the wond'rous love Of Christ thus dying for them, I conjure thee' ' Be faithful to the truth, screen not my crime, 16O Foul though it be, but let the nations know Peter, who vaunted of himself, was false. So shall they reap instruction from ray shame. And by despising me correct themselves. no CALVARY. Thus spake the contrite Saint, when now the priests. Whose custom was upon this solemn eve l66 To purge their Golgotha from human blood, Send forth their guard official to remove Christ and tlie slaves convict before the dawn Of that great day, too hallow'd to permit 1/0 Their bodies fest'ring on th' ill-omen'd cross. And lo ! the soldiers so encharg'd arrive, Survey the victims and begin the work : But first the pond'rous sledge with horrid crash Descending breaks the knees and ankle joints 175 Of these two criminals ; for stubborn life Still hover'd on their lips, and now and then Their heaving bosoms fetch'd a deep-drawn sigh. Like the slow swell of seas without a wind. But when the Savior's body they approach'd 1 80 And saw there needed not a second blow To make his death secure, the word of God Pioplietic mov'd their else obdurate hearts BOOK THE SEVENTH. Ill To break no limb ; yet one, so destin'd, thrust His spear into his side and forthwith flow'd 185 Water and blood from the heart-piercing wound : So deep the stab, that to life's citadel, Had life remain'd, the mortal point had reach'd And there had finish'd it. Meanwhile behold ! Joseph arrives ; a counsellor was he, IQO But not for death, and rich and just withal ; In Ramoth born, where Samuel first drew breath. And as his heart in righteousness and faith Stood firm with Christ whilst living, so his zeal An honour'able interment to bestow 1 g5 On his dead Master prompted him to make Bold suit to Pilate for the lifeless corpse, Nor fail'd he of his suit ; therefore he came. So favor'd, to receive the precious charge Of those dear reliques and with decent rites 200 Commit them to the grave : Spear'd to the heart. And death with double diligence ensur'd. 112 CALVARY. The body they take down ; the hands and feet Pierc'd throughwith nails and allbesmear'dwithblood O piteous spectacle ! which to behold 205 Bathes every angel face in heav'n with tears ! Accursed Deicldes ! the time comes on. When every mark your sacrilegious hands Have printed on that corpse shall be a seal To testify against you, every gash 210 Unclos'd shall with it's living lips proclaim Christ in his human attributes renew'd. Corporeal yet immortal : Then the hand Of him who doubts shall probe those gaping wounds, And by the evidence of sense compel 215 The faithless and reluctant to believe. And now they place the body on the bier, Cleans'd of the blood and wrapt In seemly cloths : Then under guard convey it to tlie vault Hewn in the rock, where never corpse was laid, 220 And there consign it to it's dark abodCj BOOK THE SEVENTH. 113 Rolling a massy fragment to the door, Unwieldly, vast ; and having seal'd the stone. They post their centinels, and so depart. [free Meanwhile the, unhoused spirit of Christ, set From gross communion with his earthly clay, 226 Borne with the meteors speed upon the wings Of mightiest Cherubim had now approach'd The dark confines of Death's engulph'd domain : Here at the barrier of that vast profound 230 On the firm adamant, from whence uprose The tow'ring stnicture of hell's ebon gate. The heav'nly Visitant descending bade His cherub bearers stoop their wings, on which As in a plumey chariot he rode ; 235 And now alighted on the dreadful brink The Savior paus'd and downward cast his eye O'er that immeasureable blank, the grave Of universal Nature, founded then And charter'd to the gloomy powers of Sin 240 114 - CALVARY. And Death Sin-born, when the primaeval pair , Lost immortality and fell from God. The starry lamps of heav'n here lost their light. No sun-beam ever reach'd this dismal realm : Yet in Christ's spi'rit divine that living light, 245 Which from the Father of creation flow'd Before all time, inherently supplied Self-fiirnish'd vision to explore the bounds Of that oblivious pit, in whose dark womb Myriads of unredeemed souls were plung'd ; 250 All who of human birth had pass'd that gate. From rigliteous Abel, the first-fruit of death. To him, whose heart had newly ceas'd to beat, "Were in that gulph immcrs'd. At farthest end Of that Obscure a pillary cloud arose 255 Of sulph'rous smoke, that from hell's crater steam'd ; Whence here and there by intermittent gleams Blue flashing fires burst forth, that sparkling blaz'd Up to the iron roof, whose echoing vault BOOK THE SEVENTH. 115 Resounded ever with the dolorous groans 260 Of the sad crew beneath : Thence might be heard The wailing suicide's remorseful plaint ; The murd'rer's yelling scream, and the loud cry Of tyrants in that fiery furnace hurl'd. Vain cry ! th' unmitigated furies urge 265 Their ruthless task and to the cauldron's edge With ceaseles toil huge blocks of sulphur roll, Pil'd mountains high to feed the greedy flames : All these, th' accursed brood of Sin, were once The guilty pleasures, the false joys, that lur'd 2/0 Their sensual vota'rists to th' infernal pit : Them their fell mother, watchful o'er the work. With eye that sleep ne'er clos'd and snaky scourge Still waving o'er their heads, for ever plies To keep the fiery deluge at it's heighth ; 2^5 And stops her ears against the clam'rous din Of, those tormented, who for mercy call Age after age implor'd and still denied. 116 CALVARY. These when th' all-present Spirit of Ch r i st descried At distance tossing in the sulph'rous lake, 2S0 And heard their dismal groans, the conscious sense Of human weakness by experience earn'd In his own mortal body now put off. And recollection that Himself of late In his sublunar pilgrimage had prov'd 285 Temptations like to their's, drew from his soul A sigh of nat'ral pity, as from man To man although in merited distress : But when his human sympathy gave place To judgment better weigh'd and riper thoughts 29O Congenial with the Godhead reassum d. The justice of their doom, tli' abhorrence due To their vile deeds by voluntary act Of will, left free, committed in despight Of conscience moving them to better thought?, 295 Turn'd him indignant from the loathed sight Of thL\seimpen:tent5 ; when, after pause. BOOK THE SEVENTH. 1I7 To Gabriel, chief of the chembic host And late his strength'ning angel, thus he spake. Gabriel, or e'er from this high steep we launch With prone descent into tliis gloomy vast, 301 This shadowy dark inane, the realm of Death, After so swift a race through all tlie spheres From earth to this hell's portal, it behoves Thee and thy plumed cohort to recruit 303 The vigor of your wings ; for sure I am That in this subterranean we shall find No breeze from heav'n's pure aether to give aid To motion, or uphold in steady poise Your feath'ry vans outstretch'd ; nor may we look For star or planet or one straggling ray 311 From circumlucent sun to guide our course Through this obscure domain of Night and Death. Nor less behoves thee, gentle as thou art. Friendliest to man of all heav'n's angel host 315 VOL. II. I 118 CALVARY. And for each task of mercy and of love First in the choice of God, to arm thy heart For the sad spectacles, the dismal scenes, Which we must needs encounter in this gulph Of human misery^ this world of woes, 320 Fit residence for Satan and his crew Of outcast angels j sad reverse to thee Inhabitant of heav'n : And now, behold ! Where hell's infernal pit with horrid glare [God Flames through the dismal gloom, there, but that In mercy films thine arch-angelic eye, 326 Such myriads in that ever-burning lake Of souls tormented thou wouldst else discern, As would appal thy nature; but these scenes From thee, a spi'rit so loving to mankind, 330 So melting soft to pity, are with-held : No mercy can I meditate for them Impenitent, no embassy of peace BOOK THE SEVENTH. 1 19 Have I in charge, no respite, till the trump Of general resurrection calls them up 335 At the last day qf judgment, then to hear Their crimes rehears'd, their blasphemies expos'd. Their envyiogs, frauds, revilings, treach'ries, plots. And ev'ry secret of their hearts unmask'd By an all-righteous Judge, who shall pronounce Their final condemnation and decree 341 Their present pains perpetual. We meanwhile To other regions shall divert our course From them and from their torments far apart. Regions of night and silence, where the souls 345 Of righteous men in their oblivious caves Sleep out the time till their Deliverer comes To -wake them from tlieir trance, dissolve the spell Of their enchanter Death, and set them free To range the fields of Paradise, where flows, 350 As from a fountain by God's presence fed, 120 CALVARY. Beatitude surpassing human thought, Pleasures unseen, unnumber'd, unconcelv'd. This said, from those high battlements tlic Dove Of Peace upon Redemption's errand sent, 355 Borne on the wings of his cherubic choir. Descended swift, and through the drowsy void To Death's terrific palace steer'd his flight. Here the Arch-foe of man, from earth expell'd By man's Redeemer, newly had arriv'd, 360 But fear-struck and in like disastrous trim With war-worn Sisera, when in his flight From the victorious Naphthalite he came To ask protection at false Jael's tent. And ruin found instead. The whirlwind's blast 365 Had shatter'd his proud form ; now scorch'd by fires, Now driv'n to regions of perpetual frost Beyond extremest Saturn's wint'ry sphere. No middle course kept he, nor had his feet BOOK THE SEVENTH. 121 From their aerial journey once found rest, 37O Till at the threshold of Death's gloomy throne Down on the solid adamant he fell Precipitate at once, and lay entranc'd Of arch-angelic majesty the wreck. Scar'd at the hideous crash and all aghast 3/5 Death scream' d amain, then wrapt himself in clouds. And in his dark pavilion trembling sate Mantled in night. And now the prostrate fiend Rear'd his terrific head with lightnings scorch'd And furrow'd deep with scars of livid hue j 360 Then stood erect and roU'd his blood-shot eyes To find the ghastly vision of grim Deatli, Who at the sudden downfal of his sire Startled, and of his own destruction warn'd. Had shrunk from sight, and to a misty cloud 385 Dissolv'd hung lowring o'er his shrouded throne. When Satan, whose last hope was now at stake. 122 CALVARY. Impatient for the interview exclaimM, [him. Where art thou. Death ? Why hide thyself from Of whom thou art ? Come fortli, thou grisly king ; And though to suitor of immortal mould 3(jl Thy refuge be denied^ yet at my call. Thy father's call, come forth and comfort me, Thou gaunt anatomy, with one short glimpse Of those dry bones, in which alone is peace 3^5 And ihat oblivious sleep, for which I sigh. He said, and now a deep and hollow groan, Like roar of distant tliunders, shook the Iiall, And from before the cloud-envelop'd tlirone The adamantine pavement burst in twain 400 With hideous crasli self-opcu'd, and display 'd A subteiraneaa chasm, whose yawning vault, Deep as the pit of Acheron, forbade All nearer access to the shado'wy king. Whereat the Jiniprison'J winds, that in it's womb BOOK THE SEVENTH. 123 Were cavern'd, 'gan to heave their yeasty waves 406 In bubbling exhalations, till at once Their eddying vapors working upwards burst From the broad vent enfranchis'd, when, behold ! The cloud that late around the throne had pour'd More than Egyptian darkness, now began 411 To lift It's fleecy skirts, till through the mist The' imperial Phantom gleam'd ; monster deform'd. Enormous, terrible, from heel to scalp One dire anatomy; his giant bones 415 Star'd through the shrivell'd skin that loosely hung On his sepulchral carcase ; round his brows A cypress wreath tiara-like he wore With nightshade and cold hemlock intertwin'd ; Behind him hung his quiver'd store of darts 420 Wing'd with the raven's plume j his fatal bow Of deadly yew, tall as Goliah's spear, Propp'd his unerring arm ; about his throne, 124 CALVARY. If throne it might be call'd, which was compos'd Of human bones, as in a charnel pil'd, 425, A hideous group of dire diseases stood. Sorrows and pains and agonizing plagues. His ghastly satellites, and, ev'n than these More terrible, ambition's slaught'ring sons. Heroes and conquerors stild on earth, but here 430 Doom'd to ignoble drudgery, employ'd To do his errands in the loathsome vault. And tend corraption's never-dying worm, To haunt the catacombs and ransack graves. Where some late popu'lous city is laid waste 435 By the destroying pestilence, or stoiTn'd By murdering Russ or Tartar blood-besmear'd And furious in the desp'rate breach to plant His eagle or his crescent on the piles Of mangled multitudes and flout the sky 440 With his victorious banners. Now a troop BOOK THE SEVENTH. 125 Of shrowded ghosts upon a signal given By their terrific Monarch start to sight. Each with a torch funereal in his grasp. That o'er the hall difFus'd a dying light, 445 Than darkness' self more horrible : The walls Of that vast cenotaph, hung round with sptears, Falchions and pole-axes and plumed helms, Shew'd like the arm'ory of some warlike state : There every mortal weapon might be seen, 450 Each implement of old or new device. Which savage nature or inventive art Furnish'd to arm the ruffian hand of war And deal to man the life-destroying stroke : And them betwixt at intervals were plac'd .4^5 The crowned skeletons of mighty kings, Caesars and Caliphs and barbarian Chiefs, Monsters, whose swords had made creation shrink. And frighted peace and science from the earth. 126 CALVARY. Pondering the scene in mute amazement rapt 460 The lost Arch-angel stood, when soon the voice Of Deatli as from the tombs low-murmuring thus Bespoke attention What uncivil cause. Prince of the air, provokes thee to offend 4(54 Against the peaceful charter of these realms [not By voice thus rude and clamo'rous ? Know'st thou I reign by privilege, though son not slave Of tliee heav'n exil'd ? Here no place hast thou, For here is peace ; no part in this domain To thee and fo thy rebel host belongs : 4/0 They in the flames of Tartarus, but we Dwell with the silent worm : The pow'r we have O'er man's corruptible and mortal part Ends with tlie body ; here the bones may sleep. For these anatomies disturb us not : 4/3 But for the spark unquenchable, the soul Immortal, which survives the fleeting breath, BOOK THE SEVENTH. 12; Of that we take no charge ; that must abide In other regions it's appointed lot Of misery or bliss. What then hath Death 4S0 To do with Satan ? Can the son, who drew Existence from the father, quench that spi'rit. Which God decreed eternal? Will those fires Cease at my word ? Hell will not hear my voice. Nor can the howlings of th' infernal pit 485 Enter my ears. Ask not repose of me. Tormented fiend : There is no grave for sin. No sleep for Satan ; fall'n from heav'n thou art. There thou hast no abode; fall'n now from earth. Where is thy lodging ? Where, but in those flames ? Pass on then in thy course, nor loiter here, 49 1 For hell expects thee : Wert thou here to stay. Death in destroying thee himself destroys. Whereto th' unwelcome visitant replied Inhospitable Pow'r ! and is it thus 4g5 128 CALVARY. Thou greet' st a father in his extreme need Suppliant for leave to draw a moment's breath In thy pale presence, till this furious blast, That followd me from earth, shall spend its rage And cease to howl through the profound of hell ? If in thy heartless trunk no mem'ory dwells 501 Of what I was, Oh ! teach me to forget What now I am and make my senses dull To pain, as thine to gratitude are lost : But if thy mind be present to record 505 My fall from bliss, will it not also serve To put thee in remembrance how that fall Bestow'd on thee a station and a name ? Had I not fall'n fiom heav'n man had not lost The joys of Paradise, immortal joys 510 Till I destroy' d them ; who then but ir.yself, Exil'd from God, brought Death into the world, Gave tliee tlie sepulchre for thy domain, BOOK THE SEVENTH. 129 And every mortal body for thy prey ? Whose hand but Satan's, thankless as thou art, 515 Plac'd that victorious wreath upon thy brow, Arm'd thee for war and bade thee be a king ? And what doth Satan now demand of Death ? What, but a moment's respite, the small boon Of hospitable shelter, where to lay 520 My aching head and rest my weary wing ? This to the father can the son refuse ? I ask no more. If Christ, from whom I fly. Pursues me to this pit, and into hell Descending shall repass her gloomy gates 525 Guarded by Sin, that barrier lost, farewell To all thy greatness ! Where shall be thy sting, O Death, and where thy victory, O Grave ? Then to have harbor'd Satan shall not add One feather to the balance of thy fate : 530 All must be lost together ; I to flames 130 CALVARY. Consign'd, thou, Phantom, into air dissolv'd. No more of this vain arguing, Death replied ; My peace and my repose I can but deal As God decrees, and as he wills withhold : 535 Thus wrangling to the latest hour of time Nothing, O Satan, couldst thou wring from me But the same answer and the same despair : I with mortality alone confer. Thou art a deathless spirit : If my pow'r 540 Cannot annihilate tlie soul of man. How then of angel ? Guilty thou hast been. Conscious must ever be, and therefore curst. Of me complaining thou condemn'st thyself. The righteous ever are at peace with Death ; 545 Thou art not of their number. Spi'rit unblest. Author of man's revolt and all things ill, The hell which thou hast peopled, is thine own. Earth thou hast made a ruin^ men by thee BOOK THE SEVENTH. 131 Perverted turn to monsters, Heav'n itself, 550 Disturb'd by thy rebellion, for a while Suffer'd convulsion, and her thrones besieg'd Echo'd the din of battle ; the fair bloom Of Paradise was blasted by thy spells, And man driv'n forth to till th' unthankful earth And toil and sweat for a precarious meal, 556 Degraded from his origin, at length To me and to corruption was consign'd. These were thy doings, this was my descent, And my inheritance the loathsome worm, 560 The throne funereal and this yawning gulph Impassable, which I am yet to thank For that it holds thee at a distance from me : This is thy bounty. Look upon these bones. Survey this dread anatomy, and say 565 If son 30 fashion'd owes his father thanks ; Proportion'd to thy goodness I accord 132 CALVARY: My gratitude by bidding thee avaunt ; ' Hence from my sight, intruder ! Thrust from earth As heretofore from heav'n, and tempest- torn 5/0 With bruised head and shatter'd flagging wing Hither thou com'st a fugitive from Him, "Whom in the wilderness for forty-days Tempting thou didst annoy : Dull, doating spirit ! Blind to thine own destruction, not to see 5/5 God's pow'r in Christ, nor understand that He, Who foil'd thy cunning, might defy thy strength : But neither strengtli nor cunning shall prevail To draw me forth upon a losing side. And set this empire on a desp'rate cast : 580 1 lack presumption to oppose that Power, Which puts hell's monarch to inglorious flight. What shelter can'st thou find behind a shade. An airy phantom ? Such thou say'st I am. Such let me be ! That phantom will not tempt 585 BOOK THE .SEVENTH. 133 The furious blast of God's avenging breath. Nor mov'd to pity by thy treacherous plaints Tender oblivion's boon to soul accurst : Such favor when tliou wouldst extort from Death, That phantom will be adamant to thee. Sgo Now learn a truth : Christ in the flesh is dead ; Yet long I cannot hold him in the grave j His body interdicted to the worm -rjji For some mysterious purpose is reserv'd From all corruption free, and sure 1 am 5g5 He will not leave his enemy at large v^ In this obscure domain, whexe sleep the soulr - Of righteous men ; fly then, whilst yet the hour Serves thee for flight And hark ! the angel trump Sounds his approach. Now tremble, thou accurst ! No more ; encanopied beneath the wings 60l Of mighty Cherubim with sounding trump And joyful chaunt the Lord of Life came on Lift up your heads, the heav'nly chorus sung, VOL. II. K J34 CALVARY. Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates, 605 And Christ the King of Glory shall come in Bright as the sun his presence 5 darkness fled Down to the center ; Satan on the earth Fell motionless j Death trembled on his throne. And call'd his shadowy guards, they with loud shrieks Vanish'd in air, whilst from the gulph profound 61 1 Blue lightnings flash 'd and deep-mouth 'd thunders roar'd ; When Christ with eye severe on Satan turn'd Bade the storm cease and thus address'd the fiend. Well art thou found, thou serpent, on the brink Of thy last home, this horrible abyss^ 616 For thee and for thine impious crew prepar'd. Man from his Gk)d by thy corruption turn'd Is by my death receiv'd into the peace Of his offended Maker, and if faith 620 Opens his way to heav'n in righteousness And true conversion, Death cannot retain BOOK THE SEVENTH. 135 His soul in darkness, nor thy crafty wiles Puzzle his path and damp his glowing zeal j But thou presumptuous,who hast had the world 625 To range at will, and from God's altars pluck'd Their consecrated honors, falsely view'd Those spoils, by sufferance yielded, as the prize Of thine own proper victory. Behold ! These are tliy triumphs ; in this pit receive 630 Thy folly's confutation and the doom Of woe eternal on thy sin denounc'd. He said, nor other answer Satan gave Than one deep groan rent from his lab'ring breast. The strong vindictive Angel, to whose charge 635 The key of that infernal pit belong'd. Now seiz'd him in his grasp, and from the ground Lifting his pond'rous bulk, such vigor dwelt In arm celestial, headlong down at once, Down hurl'd him to the bottom of the gulph, 640 Then follow'd on the wing : His yelling cries 136 CALVARY. Death heard, whilst terror shiver'd every bone : Not so the choir cherubic ; tliey with joy Beheld Redemption's triumph in the fall Of that Great Dragon, enemy of man, 645 That antient Serpent, now with bruised head And sting-bereft hurl'd down into the pit : Whereat in heav'nly concert they begin To raise their tuneful voices and sing forth Praise to the Lamb of God, and joyful strain 650 Of gratulation to the Saints redeem'd Now is salvation come and strength and power. The kingdom of our God and of his Christ : Now is that railing and malignant foe Cast down into the pit, which day and night 655 Accus"d our righteous brethren to their God : Now are they made victorious by the blood Of the Redeeming Lamb, and in the word Of Truth, their fearless witness, through the world Go forth against the anarchy of Sin 660 BOOK THE SEVENTH. 137 A host of martyrs faithful unto death 3 Therefore rejoice, ye heav'ns, and ye of earth Inhabitants, awake to joy and hail The day-spring of Salvation from on high. Satan meanwhile ten thousand fathoms deep 665 At bottom of the pit, a mangled mass With shatter'd brain and broken limbs outspread, Lay groaning on the adamantine rock : Him the strong Angel with ethereal touch Made whole in form, but not to strength restor'd. Rather to pain and the acuter sense 67 1 Of shame and torment ; hideous was the glare Of his blood-streaming eyes, and loud he yell'd For very agony, whilst on his limbs The massy fetters, such as hell alone 6'^5 Could forge in hottest sulphur, were infix d And rivetted in the perpetual stone : Upon his back he lay extended, huge, A hideous ruin j not a word vouchsaf d 138 CALVARY. That vengeful Angel, but with quick dispatch 080 Plied his commission'd task, then stretch'd the wing And upward flew ; for now th' infernal cave Through all it's vast circumference had giv'n The dreadful warning, and began to close It's rocky ribs upon th* imprison'd fiend : 685 Fierce and more fierce as it approach'd became The flaming concave ; thus comprest, the vault Red as metallic furnace glow'd intense "With heat, that had the hideous den been less Than adamant it had become a flood, 69O Or Satan other than he was in sin And arch-angelic strength preeminent. He neither could have sufter'd nor desci"v'd : Panting he roll'd in streams of scalding sweat, Parch'd with intolerable thirst, one drop 6Q5 Of water then to cool his raging tongue Had been a boon wortli all his golden shrines : Vain wish ! for now the pit had clos'd it's mouth. BOOK THE SEVENTH. 139 Nor other light remain'd than what the glare Of those reverberating fires bestow'd : 700 Then all the dungeon round was thick beset With horrid faces, threat' ning as they glar'd Their haggard eyes upon him ; from hell's lake Flocking they came, whole legions of the damn'd, His worshippers on earth, sensual, profane, 705 Abominable in their lives, monsters of vice. Blood-stained murderers, apostate kings. And crowned tyrants some, tormented now For their past crimes and into furies turn'd. Accusing their betrayer : Curses dire, 7 10 Hissings and tauntings now from eveiy side Assail'd his ear, on him, on him alone. From Cain first murderer toIscAKiox all. All with loud voices charg'd on him their sins. Their agonies, with imprecations urg'd yi5 For treble vengeance on his head accurst. Founder of hell, sole author of their woe. 140 CALVARY. And enemy avow'd of all mankind. Now -when the King of Terrors had perceiv'd The pow'r of his new Visitant, and saw 720 Satan engiilph'd, and the devouring pit, Best barrier of his throne, for ever clos'd. Descending from his state with heart abash'd. Conscious that pride would ill befriend him now In presence of his Conqueror, at the feet 725 Of Christ with low obeisance he put off The trophies of his brow, and on the knee. Stooping his vassal head, low homage paid. And suppliant thus his humble suit preferr'd. Immortal King ! all glorious and all good, 730 At whose great name befits that every knee In heav'n or earth or in these realms beneath Should bend adoring, let thy will prevail Here, as wherever else ! And sure I am 'Tis not my pow'r but thine own wond'rous love, Consenting to the deed, hath brought thee here 736 BOOK THE SEVENTH. 14i In pity to mankind to taste the cup \ Of agony and visit these sad shades. Though deathless ; thence to re-ascehd, as soon Thou shalt, victorious to the realms of light. 740 I know thee for the Christ the Son of God, Messias of the prophets long foreseen. Yet of the unbelieving Jews despis'd. Rejected, for thou cam'st not in the pomp Of tempo' ral majesty, and only great 745 In patience, in humility, in love And miracles of mercy. At thy feet This head uncrown'd thus stooping, I resign All empire ; not on me let fall thy wrath As on that bruised Serpent. What am 1 ? 750 What is the sword, what is the pestilence, And all my host of mortal ministers. But servants of thy providence, a scourge And rod of vengeance, wherewith to chastise Presumptuous, guilty pride ? Whose hand but mine 142 CALVARY. Strikes terror to the atheist's harden'd heart ? 756 Who plucks the tyrant from his bloody car And rolls him in the dust ? or at a blow- Strangles the curse in the blasphemer's tliroat ? If on the martyr's head ray axe descends, 76O The same hand plants a crown of glory there j And if in my dark caves the righteous sleep. Peaceful they sleep ; I break not their repose. For silence dwells with me and night and rest. Behold the key inviolate that guards 7*35 Their hallow'd slumbers ; never did I yield. Though oft solicited, this sacred pledge To Satan or his sin-defiled crew j Faithflil I've kept it ever, faithful now To thee their Savior I resign my charge, 770 This said, the golden badge of his command, Rich and of heavnly workmanship with gems Of azure, green and purple thick emboss'd. Humbly he laid at the Rebeemer's feet ; BOOK THE SEVENTH. 143 He to the zeal of Gabriel strait consign'd 775 Th' enlargement of those spi'rits to bliss preferr'd, Fit minister for office so benign : Whereat he bade sound forth the signal trump Of the First ResuiTCction^ heard of none Save of those holy Saints elect of God, 780 Martyrs and prophets, call'd to live with Christ, In antecedent glory till the day Of general Resurrection shall awaken And summon into judgment all mankind. Swift hied that friendly Angel on the wing, 785 Swifter, for that, on gracious errand sent, Joy urg'd him to put forth his utmost speed ; Meanwhile the heav'nly Visitant cf Death Upon that ghastly Vision turn'd his eyes. And thus in accent mild address'd the Shade. 790 That Icamedownfromheav'nand am the Christ, Rightly, O Death, thou hast pronounc'd ; yet here I come not to destroy thy power at once. 144 CALVARY. But to set free the Saints thou hold'st in thrall, And call them to my peace ; but ev'n of these 795 Part till my second coming must abide : Of thee and all things of corruption bred The term is fix'd ; God must be all in all : But time, as man computes, hath yet to roll Through numerous ages ere the final trump 800 Shall sound thy knell. I brought not upon earth Peace, but the sword 3 the gospel I have preach'd Man will corrupt, misconstrue and pervert ; Nor shall my Church be only drench'd with blood Of it's own martyrs, zealots shall arise 805 Aliens to my humility and peace. With more than pagan enmity enflam'd Each against other : then shall ruthless war And persecution and fierce civil rage Ravage the Christian world ; intole'rant pride, 810 Usurping pow'r infallible, shall send It's heralds forth with cursing in their mouths BOOK THE SEVENTH. 145 And fetters for man's conscience in their hands ; They in the battle's front shall plant the Cross And bid the unconverted nations kneel 815 Under their conqu'ring standard and adopt The creed of murderers, who^ in the place Of the pure bond of charity, present A forged scroll blurr'd and defac'd with lies. And impiously inscribe it with my Name. 820 These are religion's traitors, and from them An ample harvest shalt thou reap, O Death ; Suffice it thee to know that for a while Thou shalt be spar'd : And now no more ; Behold ! Gabriel leads on the congregated Saints. 825 Vanish, pale Phantom ! Give the ransom'd place. END OF THE SEVENTH BOOK. CAJLVAIRY Cbe Deatft of Cftiigt. BOOK VIII. THE ARGUMENT OF THE EIGHTH BOOK. Christ, having closed his tyiterview with Death, prepares to receive the Saints of the First Resurrection now approaching under the conduct of the angel Gabriel, and having ascended a mount in the midst of the congregation appears to them in glory : They pay homage to their Redeemer in a hymn of praise and thanksgiving : He addresses them in reply, and assures them of the blessings of immortal life bestowed upon them by the Father as the reward of righteousness : The pa- triarch Abraham enters into conference with Christ, in the conclusio7i of which the Savior of the world shews him the glorious vision of the heavenly Jerusalem, the holy city, as described in the Apocalypse : JVhen this beatifc vision is passed away, Christ reascends to earth in view of the whole assembly of Saints : The angel Gabriel, who is left behind, addresses tliemfrom the mount and expounds the purposes of the Savior's resurrcctio7i from thi: dead and return to earth: Moses recapitulates the events of his life, instances the fre- quent rebellions of the Lord's unfaithful people, and laments their future impenitence and incredulity: Gabriel replies, and from the nature of mail's free will explains the origin and necessity of evil, from which he deduces the benefits of Christ's death and redemption : And now the Spirit of God desrendi.'!g on the hearts of the 7 isbi'-'>t/s, inspires them with all under- standing and k7ioivle(!fie, Jiii-d to their happy rondttion ; A Paradise arises within the regions of Death ; Gabriel ad- dresses them for the last time, and upon his departure the Pnrm concludes. CALYAMY. BOOK VIII. THE RESURRECTION FROM THE DEAD. Now had the Savior by the word of power Wafted the magic Phantom into air, And all the horrors of the scene dispell'd : Swift as the stroke of his own winged dart. Or flitting shadows by the moon-beam chas'd, 5 Death on the instant vanish'd : What had seem'd A. citadel of proud and martial port With bastions fenc'd and tow'rs impregnable Of adamant compos'd and lofty dome. Covering the throne imperial, now was air j 10 And, far as eye could reach, a level plain. In the intermin'able horizon lost, VOL. it. L 150 CALVARY. Unfolded it's vast champain to the view. Darkness twin-born with Death had fled ; the rays. That from the Savior's sun-crown'd temples bcam'd With dazzling lustre brighten'd all the scene. l6 There just emerging to the distant view, And glitt'ring white, a multitude appear'd, Stretch'd east and west in orderly array. Swift marching underneath the mighty wings 20 Of the protecting Angel, who in air Soar'd imminent, and with the broad expanse From flank to flank envelop'd all the host : He with the blast of the awak'ning trump Gave note of their advance. In the mid-plain 25 There was a mount ; thither the Savior hied With his cherubic guard, and there in view Of the assembled myriads stood sublime. The Saints in order form'd themselves around. Orb within orb, eacli in his proper sphere 30 Iiiatinctivcly arrang'd ; then all at once. BOOK THE EIGHTH. 151 As by one soul inspir'd, with bended knee And forehead prostrate on the earth they paid Joint homage and ador'd. Oh ! who shall dare With bold conjecture to compute the list 35 Of that blest multitude, or say, who first. Who last, receiv'd the glorious All-haU, Ye blessed of my Father ? Yet perchance. So warranted by scripture and so taught By moral sage experience, we may doubt 40 If many rich, if many great or learn'd W^ere of that righteous company } be sure The lover of this world had there no place. He bartcr'd it for gold, he pass'd it off To Belial for a perishable toy, 45 He sold it to a wanton : There the proud Were brought down, and the meek and lowly rals'd : The conque'ror not of others but himself There found pre-eminence : All joy to him. Who rear'd the orphan, dried the widow's tears, 50 152 CALVARY. And sought affliction in her secret haunts. Not for the praise of men ; and may not we. Born in an age when mild philantliropy Hath taught a better lesson to the heart. May not we foster a kind hope that some 55 Of pagan name were call'd, who through the maze Of dark idolatry took Reason's clue, And found a mental avenue to God ? Here with the Fatlier of the Faithful stood A host of patriarchs, prophets, judges, saints : CO Noah, who perfect in the time of wrath And righteous found, was left unto the earth A remnant, when the waters fell from heav'n, And was in covenant with tlie Most High That man no more should perish by the flood : 65 JMoses, the faithful servant of the Lord, Meekest, though mightiest, of the sons of men. And glorious in the sight of dreadful kings : Joshua, th' avenger of th' Elect of God, BOOK THE EIGHTH. 153 Whose voice upon mount Gibeon staid the sun yo In the mid-heav'n, and bade the moon stand still In Ajalon's dark vale, till Israel ceas'd [sheath'd : From slaughter and the conqu'ring sword was Here Samuel in his linen ephod girt, Thrice call'd of God, amid the foremost stood : 75 He, who with Baal's priests contending rear'd His rival altars and brought fire from heav'n To vindicatejiis God : The Psalmist King, And he, at whose sick pray'r the sun went back. And he, surnam'd the Good : Daniel the seer, 80 And they, who in the furnace walk'd unhurt 3 All in the sacred page recorded just And faithful servants of the living God : For who can doubt the holy word of truth Attesting their salvation ? Yet there is 85 One, who, by promise sacredly assur'd Of bliss immediate, heard the glorious call. Whilst hanging on tlie cross, by penitence 154 CALVARY. And faith obtain'd from the all-gracious lips Of God's own Son expiring at his side. QO Hail, holy congregation, elder-born - Of righteousness and first-fruits of the grave. Elect unto salvation ! Hail, blest Saints, Now cloathcd in white robes, as in your lives With purity, sound forth your praise to God Q5 And to the Lamb, in whose blootl ye are wash'd ; Wave high your branches of victorious palni. Hymning the strain, which He in Patmos heard. What time the glorious vision was reveal'd. Hail, First and Last! th' immortal chorus sung. Of all things tlic beginning and the end ; 101 For thou art he, mIio livcth and wast dead. And lo! thou art alive for evermore. And hold" St in hand of hell and death the keys. Salvation to our God and to the Lamb 105 At his right hand, who sitteth on the throne ; Blessing and glory, wisdom, honor, power. BOOK THE EIGHTH. 155 Might and tlianksgiving evermore to God And to his Christ ! Father, we give thee thanks. Lord God, which wast and art and art to come, 1 ] For this thy mighty pow'r in us fulfiU'd. Now are the kingdoms of this world become The kingdoms of our Lord and of his Christ, And he shall reign for ever ; now thy wrath On the rebellious nations is let loose j 1 15 Now is the first call of the sleeping saints, And all thy servants faithful unto death Thou hast rewarded with eternal bliss. Henceforth for ev^er blessed are the dead. Thus dying in the Lord, for they shall rest 120 From labor, and their good works are not lost ! Their hymn perform'd, the whole redeemed host. With hands uplifted and all eyes direct Upon the glorious Presence, bent the knee Silent^ whilst thus the Lord of Mercy spake. 125 Ye blessed of my Fatlier, prophets, saints 156 CALVARY. And martyrs j ye of Abraham's faithful stock. And ye, though wild by nature, grafted in Upon the parent tree and bearing fruits To life eternal, welcome to my peace ! 130 Now are your watchings and your labors past. Your tribulations, self-denials, pains And mournings recompens'd ; never again Shall ye know thirst or hunger, nor the sun Scorch you by day, nor yet by night the moon ; 135 For ye shall dwell before the throne of God, And I will feed you ; I will lead you forth To' living founts and wipe away all tears. Come, enter ye into your Master's joy. Come, for the throne awaits you, take the crown 1 40 Of glory, take the kingdom from all time For you prepar'd, possess your happy rights. The earnings of your charity and love : For I was hungrcd and ye gave me meat. Thirsty I was and ye asswag'd my thirst, M5 BOOK THE EIGHTH, 157 I was a stranger and ye took me in. Naked ye cloath'd me, sick ye visited, I was in prison and ye came unto me. "When Lord, the righteous humbly interpos'd, "When were these charities by us perform'd ? J 50 How have we merited this praise of thee. Whom in the flesh we knew not ? Tell us. Lord, When saw we thee an-hungred and gave food ? When thirsty and gave drink ? a stranger when And took thee in, naked and cloathed thee ; 155 When saw we thee in sickness or in prison And came unto thee ? When didst thou endure These hard necessities, or we relieve ? Whereto the Lord replied: Truly ye say Ivie in the flesh ye knew not, yet in spi'rit l60 Ye knew me, for my law was in your hearts ; And what to these my brethren ye have done, Qr to the least of these, ye did to me. Patron of mercy and the friend of man, 158 CALVARY. To every one, but not to all alike, 1 65 Some talent is in trust, the loan of Heav'n, To husband as he may, and he who spares From his imparted fund wherewith to help His neighbor's scantier dole, improves the loan And makes his Lord his debtor. First and last, 1 /O Ere Abraham was I am. Open your ears ! Hear, mark and understand : The world by sin Original had fallen off from God ; Man was become corrupt, idolatrous, Abominable; Satan reign'd on earth. 175 Ye are of various ages 3 all have slept, And some from earliest times or e'er the flood Swallow'd the nations, yet with one accord All in your several periods have bewail'd Degenerated man : Noah can tell 180 How all the earth with violence was fiU'd, Or e'er the fountains of the vasty deep Were broken up : IVIoses can well declare BOOK THE EIGHTH. 159 How hard and to rebellion prone the hearts Of those, whom he led forth : Samuel beheld 185 A stiff-neck'd generation spurn the yoke And kick against their God 3 but vain his voice. Vain all the prophets voices, which foretold My coming, without whom the world were lost. Now is salvation come ; I've drank the cup 19O Of bitterness and died the deadi for man : My peace I've left on earth ; the living M^orld, They have the word of truth and by that word Through faith they shall be sav'd ; from them I came To visit these dark regions and redeem I95 The saints who slept ; behold ! ye are ahve: Death hath no more dominion ! Satan, chain'd For ages, shall abide his time to come : Meanwhile in glory ye shall dwell with me 5 By resurrection purchas'd with my blood 200 Ye are the first-fruits of immortal life. Now Abraham, father of the faithful band 160 CALVARY. And first in station nearest to the mount. His eyes uplifted to the face divine Of the effulgent Virtue, and thus spake. 205 Yet once more, as aforetime in the days Of Sodom^ suffer me to plead for man. And ask of thee his Savior if these feWy Few not in numbers, yet for heav'n too few And for heav'n's mercy, seeing there are past 210 So many many ages of the world. Are all that shall be sav'd : Alas, for mm ! If this be the whole remnant, all the stock CuU'd from so many myriads for God's fold. 214 Where are the nations vanish'd ? Where the hosts, That sea, earth, flood and fire have swallow'd up ? Can hell contain them ? Can devouring Death Find stomach for them all ? Did God make man For death and hell, or thou endure the cross Only for us ? Are all the righteous shrunk 220 To this small measure ? Aud^ if these be all. BOOK THE EIGHTH. i6l Are they not yet enough to save the rest. If heav'nly mercy listen to our prayer ? May not our righteousness so save a world From wrath, as once the righteousness of five 225 Had sav'd a guilty city from it's fate? To him the Lord of Mercy : I have said Ye are the first fruits by my blood obtain'd. The earnest of redemption : I have bruis'd, Not crush'd, the Serpent's head ; he shall arise 230 Out of the pit once more to vex the earth. Death the last enemy is not destroy'd, Yet is his sceptre shorten'd, and the key, That opens into life, now in those hands. Where mercy best can place it for man's good : 235 Thus of all pow'r though Death is not bereft. Yet I have shook his throne, with inroad deep rierc'd his dark realm, and, you redeeming thence, Made tenantless your graves, his strongest holds. With you when from this depth I reascend, 2^/..l,X;'/,;,..l//,-ii .i- Or/h,,/-''- ,'l't/u- V. BOOK THE EIGHTH. 175 There with the Beast in torments they shall dwell, Seal'd in their foreheads with his mark and drink The cup of indignation to the dregs Wrung out in anger, whilst their ceaseless cry 4Q0 Shall with the smoke of the infernal pit Day after day for evermore ascend. No roo-t ; for now the heav'nly vision clos'd; Awaken'd from his trance the Patriarch turn'd With grateful reverence to address the Lord 405 And giver of these new-discover'd joys, When lo ! ascending from the mount he saw Christ in a cloud of glory on the wings Of mighty Cherubim upborne in air High-soaring, to this orb terraqueous bound, 500 Seen over-head diminish'd to a point Dim and opake amid the blue serene : His raiment, whiter than the new-born light Struck out of chaos by the Maker's hand In earnest of creation, spai'kling blaz'd 505 176 CALVARY. In it's swift motion and with fiery track Mark'd his ascent to earth } the host of Saints With joyful loud hosannas fill'd the air : Glory to God on high, was all their strain. On the earth peace, good-will to all mankind ! 510 Meanwhile th' Arch-angel Gab KIEL, who yet kept His tutelary station on tlie mount. So bidd'n of Christ, with arm outstretch'd and voice Commanding silence, thus the Saints bespake. Now is your resurrection sure, your joy, 515 Your glory and your triumph over Death And hell made perfect ; for behold where Christ Your first-fruit is aris'n, and waves on high The ensign of redemption ; now he soars Up to yon pendent world, that darkling speck, 520 Which in the boundless empyrean floats Pois'd on it's whirling axle ; there he liv'd And took your mortal body, there he died And for your sakcs endur'd the painful cross. BOOK THE EIGHTH. 177 Giving his blood a ransom for your sins ; 525 Thither he goes to re- assume his flesh ; There, when his angel ministers have op'd The sealed sepulchre, he shall come fortli And shew himself resurgent from the grave To those whom he hath sanctified and call'd 530 To be his witnesses in all the world, And of his resurrection after death Their faithful evidence to seal with blood Of martyrs and apostles, warning men With their last breath to be baptiz'd and live ; 533 So shall the seed be water'd and increase. Till all the Gentile nations shall come in And dwell beneath it's branches evermore. Now are the gates of everlasting life Set open to mankind, and when the Lord, 5iO Captain of their sah^ation, shall have liv'd His promis'd term on earth, and thence to heav'n Ascending seat himself at God's right hand. 178 CALVARY. Then shall the Holy Ghost the Comforter Rush like a mighty wind upon the hearts 545 Of his inspir'd apostles ; tongues of fire And languages untaught they shall receive To speak with boldness the revealed Word, Enduring all things for the gospel's sake ; Troubled on ev'ry side yet not distress'd, 550 Perplex'd but not surrender'd to despair, Afflicted not forsaken they shall be. Cast down but not destroy'd, knowing that God, Who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead. Them also into life through him will raise, 555 And that the light affliction of this world. Which is but for a moment, soon shall be O'erpaid by a far more exceeding weight Of gloiy' eternal in the life to come. He ceas'd, and all were silent, wrapt in awe oGO Of the late glorious vision, yet in heart Troubled for what the Ansrel had reveal'd BOOK THE EIGHTH. 179 Of sorrows still to come and pains and deaths To be encounter'd by the Saints on earth ; When now that Shepherd, who on Sinai's mount Commun'd with God and heard creation's plan 566 Expounded by it's Architect, thus spake. Oh tliou, whom through the fiery cloud I saw On Horeb's hill, when tending Jethro's flock. What time I heard my name twice call'd of God In thunder from amidst the flaming bush, 57 1 Bidding me strait go forth to loose his sheep From Egypt's captive fold, I do perceive That I have penn'd the Word of God aright. And now in Christ behold the woman's seed 575 Bruising that Serpent's head, who wrought the fall Of our first parents. Forty days and nights On Sinai's top 'midst thund'rings, clouds and fire Fasting I stood, and whilst the hallow'd ground Trembled beneath my bare unsandal'd feet, 580 I heai d an awful voice^ that bade me write 180 CALVARY, fc The glorious record of his six days work. Aghast, confounded, dazzled with the blaze Of glory, still my faithful pen obey'd The sacred dictates of an unseen God : 585 I wrote, and to an unbelieving world Publish'd the wond'rous Code ; age after age Libeird the transcript : With the rod of pow'r I smote the seas asunder ; Israel pass'd Through wat'ry battlements ; forty long years 5C)0 In the waste howling wilderness 1 fed Their murmuring tribes with food miraculous ; They fed but raurmur'd still : I brought them laws With God's own finger graven ; I came down Bearing Jehovah's statutes in my hand 5Q5 On both sides written : impious noisy shouts. Lewd triumphs and vile revels smote mine ear j The people danc'd around a molten calf. Monstrous idolatry ! Raging with shame I dash'J the stony tablets on the ground, 600 BOOK THE EIGHTH. 181 And shiver'd them to fragments ; God was mock'd : A stiff-neck'd and a stubborn race they were, Who from the rock of their salvation turn'd And sacrific'd to devils ; and behold ! Their sons have crucified the Lord of Life : 605 Therefore his resurrection, which shall be Light and redemption to the Gentile world. To them is darkness and the shadow' of death ; For they have slain the very Paschal Lamb ; That bloody symbol of their antient law, . 6]0 Which I made sacred, they have now made void, And cancell'd my legation : I perceive A new commandment is gone forth ; I see The temple's vail is rent ; for the old law, A carnal shadow of things spiritual, 6 15 Saffic'd not for perfection and the pow'r Of an eternal life ; Christ is become That King of Salem, that immortal Priest Of God most high;, whose ministry supreme, VOL. 11. N 182 CALVARY. Before all time from heav'n itself derlv'd 620 And not from right Levitical, removes All title from that consecrated tribe. Where I had fix'd it. God, who sending me. Sent but his servant, now hath giv'n his Son More worthy of his glory ; without sin 625 And spotless He, the great High Priest, hath pass'd Into the heav'ns victorious over Death ; But I, whose trespasses at Meribah, Frail sinful man, provok'd the Lord to wrath. Saw but the skirts of Dan from Plsgah's top, 630 Unworthy deem'd to enter that fair land. And died upon mount Nebo. But when Christ, Who hath awaken'd us from sleep, shall rise And in his mortal flesh a second time Visit his Saints on earth, who then shall say 635 There is no resurrection of the dead ? Faintly I shadow'd forth a future life ; I spnke not to men's senses, as Cueist speaks; BOOK THE EIGHTH. 183 God gave me no commission to reveal Tlie secrets of the grave j corruption's worm 640 Spar'd not my flesh, nor came my spirit back From Death's dark citadel to give mankind Conviction ocular of his defeat ; I left him in his power till Christ should come To break that sceptre^which had aw'd the world. 645 Much then it moves my wonder, much I grieve That darkness shall not yet be drawn aside From Israel, and that tliose, who would not hear Me and the prophets, shall not yet believe Chkist their Messias rising from the dead. 650 To whom th' Arch-angel answer'd heav'nly mild : Well may'st thou muse that reas'ning man should doubt. And cause we have to grieve, when he neglects So great salvation ; but when Christ hath shewn "Wliat is the good and true and perfect way 655 Reason must do the rest : When all are free 184 CALVARY. Some must be faithless, wilful and perverse. God could have made his creatures void of sin. For he can put a master in their hearts. And govern them by instinct : but to man 660 He gave a nobler faculty, a will, A spark of immortality, a soul. Reason to counsel that immortal soul. And conscience to restrain licentious will. Grace shall assist the humble and devout ; 665 A proud man hath no friend in heav'n or earth, Renounc'd of angels and by men abhorr'd : Truth must be sought, it will not be impos'd : What were that revelation, which should leave No exercise to faith ? All men must work 670 With fear and trembling their salvation out. God does not give free will to take away What he hath giv'n; if man will sin, he must: Nor do we call them good, who cannot err. Else brutes would claim a virtue. None is crood .Wto-rai scuZp. (^^rr^i^ f^yfy/y/M /w/W^y Oi''^y 'Mtsh<-d S^ov^:lSoo. hy I.,n-kinat,'nAlU:n X- <'? 'Jhit/i'.- fl'Uit Kit, BOOK THE EIGHTH. 185 Save God alone ; impute we not to God 6/0 The evil vi^hich man does, nor him arraign Jb'or not preventing ills which he foreknows : Angels have sinn'd and some are fall'n from bliss , All had their days of error, their degrees 680 Of good and ill, else why have we degrees Ranks and precedencies of bliss in heav'n ? Call your own lives to mind ; ye have been men. Your failings many, yet your virtues more ; Why are ye now rewarded by your God ? 685 Why but because those virtues were your own ? Ye made them what they were, ye rear'd their growth. Reason reform'd the wild luxuriant soil, Pluck'd up the weeds and nurs'd the glorious fruit. Is there amongst you one that hath to boast 6gO Human perfection ? There is none that will. A free yet faultless creature would be more Than man, than angel ; nor can God create 186 CALVARY. An equal to himself, a rival God. In Eden's happy groves when man was plac'd, 6q5 One interdicted baneful plant there was. Tempting and rich in fruit j all else was good, Fair to the eye and wholesome to the taste ; Yet of that fruit man pluck'd and eat and died ; Tempted he was, but not compell'd to take ; 700 Warn'd to abstain, no angel stopp'd his hand, No thundering voice deterr'd him from the deed. For man was free ; so could he not have been, Had God's foreknowledge ovcr-ruld his will. Thus Sin had origin and Death began 705 His occupation with the human race. More terrible for that he came with pangs. Horrors and doubts on sin-oppressed man, When conscience wrung him in the parting hour : But still the inextinguishable soul / 10 Mock'd at Death's dart, the body was his own From the beginning ; of the eartli 'twas made. BOOK THE EIGHTH. 187 The earth it till'd and from the earth it fed ; A tenement of dust was never form'd For immortality ; and now, behold, '/15 Adam the earthy man, in whom all die, Is buried to the world ; redemption brings The day-spring of Salvation from on high, Christ in his glory comes, the Lord from heav'n. And who in him have faith, in him have life. 720 He ceas'd, when now th' assembly of the Saints, Who whilst he spake stood in their orbs unmov'd Circling the mount, 'gan feel the Spi'rit of God Descending on their hearts, and, like a sea By secret currents from it's bottom stirr'd, ^25 Wav'd to and fro their undulating files Wide and more wide, as with a mighty wind The heav'nly inspiration on them rush'd : This Gabriel heard and from the mount came down. Which quak'd beneath his feet, whilst over-head 730 188 CALVARY. Loud thunderings announc'd the coming God : And now a fire, that cover'd all the mount. Bespoke him present ; all the air respir'd Ambrosial odours, amaranth and rose. For Nature felt her God, and every flower 735 And every fragrant shrub, whose honied breath Perfumes the courts of heav'n, had burst to life Blooming, and, in a thousand colors dy'd. Threw their gay mantle o'er the naked heath : Now glow'd the living landscape ; hill and dale 740 Rose on tlie flat, or sunk as Nature shap'd Her lovliest forms and swell'd her wavey line. Leaving unrein'd variety to run Her wild career amid the sportive scene : Nor were there wanting trees of ev'ry growth, 745 Umbrageous some, making a verdant tent Under their spreading branches, some of shaft Majestic, tow' ring o'er the subject groves : Blossoms and fruits and aromatic crums BOOK THE EIGHTH. iSp Scented the breeze, that fann'd their rustling leaves ; And them betwixt, a crystal river flow'd ^5 1 O'er golden sands, meand'ring in it's course Through amaranthine banks with lulling sound Of dulcet murmurs breathing soft repose. Thus at the sight of God spontaneous rose ^55 A Paradise within the realm of Death, Where that blest congregation might abide Their Lord's return now visitant on earth : And now th' Eternal having breath'd his joy Into their hearts and giv'n them to discern 76O All knowledge, that befitted souls so blest, Withdrew his presence from the flaming mount ; Whereat the min'istring Angel, who beheld Salvation's work complete, thus parting spake. God, in whose presence pleasure ever dwells, ^65 Hath for your dear Redeemer's sake bestow'd These joys, and now his presence is withdrawn : Yet hath he left his spirit in your hearts 190 CALVARY. To teach you all that is and is to be ; Behold, the cloud that veil'd your mortal eyes 7/0 Is drawn aside, and what as in a glass Darkling ye saw now face to face is seen : Ye now discern the ways of God how just. How true, how wise, how perfect in design, And well ye knew that man, presumptuous man, 'J'/5 In a vain shadow walketh, ye perceive His boasted mind sufficient for the things. That to his own salvation appertain ; Yet when it scans the mysteries of heaven, How false, how weak, how daringly absurd I /SO Firm faith, warm charity and humble hope. These are the Christian graces, these the guides. That lead to life eternal ; thoughts perverse. Pert quibbling follies, publish'd in the pride Of false philosophy, are dev'lish arts, ^85 That damn the instrument, who thus attempts To hide tlic li^ht of revelation's beam BOOK THE EIGHTH, 191 From weaker eyes, and turn the world from God ; These verily shall have tlieir just reward : And now no more ; this Paradise ye see ^QO Is but your passage to a brighter scene, A resting-place till Christ shall re-ascend To the right hand of God and call you hence To share his glory in the heav'n of heavens. He said, and swifter than the meteor's glance, ygs Sprung on the wing to seek his native sphere : The Saints look'd up, then sung with joint acclaim Glory to God and praises to his Christ, Judge and Redeemer of the quick and dead ! 799 EXD OF THE POEM. PRIMTED BY J. D. DEWICK, ALUF.nSG ATE-STR F.ET. "sr msjuFAirjOsx^ jhei^w jwiw ji;a na:H(srf