Read Paradise Lost (Modern Library Classics) Online
Authors: John Milton,William Kerrigan,John Rumrich,Stephen M. Fallon
Adverse to life: then founded
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, then conglobed
Like things to like, the rest to several place
Disparted
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, and between spun out the air,
And Earth self-balanced
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on her center hung.
“ ‘Let there
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be light,’ said God, and forthwith light
Ethereal, first of things, quintessence pure
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Sprung from the deep, and from her native east
To journey through the airy gloom began,
Sphered in a radiant cloud, for yet the sun
Was not; she in a cloudy tabernacle
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Sojourned the while. God saw the light was good;
And light from darkness by the hemisphere
Divided: light the day, and darkness night
He named. Thus was the first day ev’n and morn
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:
Nor passed uncelebrated, nor unsung
By the celestial choirs, when orient
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light
Exhaling
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first from darkness they beheld;
Birthday of heav’n and Earth; with joy and shout
The hollow universal orb they filled,
And touched their golden harps, and hymning praised
God and his works; Creator him they sung,
Both when first ev’ning was, and when first morn.
“Again, God said,
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‘Let there be firmament
Amid the waters, and let it divide
The waters from the waters’: and God made
The firmament, expanse
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of liquid, pure,
Transparent, elemental air, diffused
In circuit to the uttermost convex
Of this great round
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: partition firm and sure,
The waters underneath from those above
Dividing: for as Earth, so he the world
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Built on circumfluous waters calm, in wide
Crystalline ocean, and the loud misrule
Of Chaos far removed, lest fierce extremes
Contiguous might distemper the whole frame
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:
And heav’n he named the firmament: so ev’n
And morning chorus sung the second day.
“The Earth was formed, but in the womb as yet
Of waters, embryon immature involved
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,
Appeared not: over all the face of Earth
Main ocean flowed, not idle, but with warm
Prolific humor soft’ning all her globe,
Fermented the great mother
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to conceive,
Satiate with genial
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moisture, when God said,
‘Be gathered now ye waters under heav’n
Into one place, and let dry land appear.’
Immediately the mountains huge appear
Emergent, and their broad bare backs upheave
Into the clouds, their tops ascend the sky:
So high as heaved the tumid
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hills, so low
Down sunk a hollow bottom broad and deep,
Capacious bed of waters: thither they
Hasted with glad precipitance
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, uprolled
As drops on dust conglobing
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from the dry;
Part rise in crystal wall
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, or ridge direct,
For haste; such flight the great command impressed
On the swift floods: as armies at the call
Of trumpet (for of armies thou hast heard)
Troop to their standard, so the wat’ry throng,
Wave rolling after wave, where way they found,
If steep, with torrent rapture
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, if through plain,
Soft-ebbing; nor withstood them rock or hill,
But they, or under ground, or circuit wide
With serpent error wand’ring
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, found their way,
And on the washy ooze deep channels wore;
Easy, ere God had bid the ground be dry,
All but within those banks, where rivers now
Stream, and perpetual draw their humid train.
The dry land, earth, and the great receptacle
Of congregated waters
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he called seas:
And saw that it was good, and said, ‘Let th’ earth
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Put forth the verdant grass, herb yielding seed,
And fruit tree yielding fruit after her kind;
Whose seed is in herself upon the earth.’
He scarce had said, when the bare earth
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, till then
Desert and bare, unsightly, unadorned,
Brought forth the tender grass, whose verdure clad
Her universal face with pleasant green,
Then herbs of every leaf, that sudden flow’red
Op’ning their various colors, and made gay
Her bosom smelling sweet: and these scarce blown,
Forth flourished thick the clust’ring vine, forth crept
The swelling
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gourd, up stood the corny reed
Embattled
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in her field: add the humble shrub,
And bush with frizzled hair
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implicit: last
Rose as in dance the stately trees, and spread
Their branches hung with copious fruit; or gemmed
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Their blossoms: with high woods the hills were crowned,
With tufts the valleys and each fountain side,
With borders long the rivers. That Earth now
Seemed like to Heav’n, a seat where gods might dwell,
Or wander with delight, and love to haunt
Her sacred shades: though God had yet not rained
Upon the earth, and man to till the ground
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None was, but from the earth a dewy mist
Went up and watered all the ground, and each
Plant of the field, which ere it was in the earth
God made, and every herb, before it grew
On the green stem; God saw that it was good:
So ev’n and morn recorded
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the third day.
“Again th’
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Almighty spake: ‘Let there be lights
High in th’ expanse of heaven to divide
The day from night; and let them be for signs,
For seasons, and for days, and circling years,
And let them be for lights as I ordain
Their office in the firmament of heav’n
To give light on the Earth’; and it was so.
And God made two great lights, great for their use
To man, the greater to have rule by day,
The less by night altern
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: and made the stars,
And set them in the firmament of heav’n
To illuminate the Earth, and rule the day
In their vicissitude
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, and rule the night,
And light from darkness to divide. God saw,
Surveying his great work, that it was good:
For of celestial bodies first the sun
A mighty sphere he framed, unlightsome first,
Though of ethereal mold
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: then formed the moon
Globose, and every magnitude of stars
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,
And sowed with stars the heav’n thick as a field:
Of light by far the greater part he took,
Transplanted from her cloudy shrine, and placed
In the sun’s orb, made porous to receive
And drink the liquid light, firm to retain
Her gathered beams, great palace now of light.
Hither as to their fountain other stars
Repairing, in their golden urns draw light,
And hence the morning planet
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gilds her horns;
By tincture or reflection
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they augment
Their small peculiar
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, though from human sight
So far remote, with diminution seen.
First in his east the glorious lamp was seen,
Regent of day, and all th’ horizon round
Invested
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with bright rays, jocund to run
His longitude
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through Heav’n’s high road: the gray
Dawn, and the Pleiades
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before him danced
Shedding sweet influence: less bright the moon,
But opposite in leveled west
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was set
His mirror
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, with full face borrowing her light
From him, for other light she needed none
In that aspect
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, and still that distance keeps
Till night, then in the east her turn she shines,
Revolved on Heav’n’s great axle
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, and her reign
With thousand lesser lights dividual
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holds,
With thousand thousand stars, that then appeared
Spangling the hemisphere: then first adorned
With their bright luminaries that set and rose,
Glad ev’ning and glad morn crowned the fourth day.
“And God said,
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‘Let the waters generate
Reptile
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with spawn abundant, living soul:
And let fowl fly above the earth, with wings
Displayed
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on the op’n firmament of heav’n.’
And God created the great whales, and each
Soul living, each that crept, which plenteously
The waters generated by their kinds
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,
And every bird of wing after his kind;
And saw that it was good, and blessed them, saying,
‘Be fruitful, multiply, and in the seas
And lakes and running streams the waters fill;
And let the fowl be multiplied on the earth.’
Forthwith the sounds and seas, each creek and bay
With fry innumerable swarm, and shoals
Of fish that with their fins and shining scales
Glide under the green wave, in schools that oft
Bank the mid sea
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: part single or with mate
Graze the seaweed their pasture, and through groves
Of coral stray, or sporting with quick glance
Show to the sun their waved coats dropped with gold,
Or in their pearly shells at ease, attend
Moist nutriment, or under rocks their food
In jointed armor watch: on smooth
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the seal,
And bended
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dolphins play: part huge of bulk
Wallowing unwieldy, enormous in their gait
Tempest the ocean: there leviathan
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Hugest of living creatures, on the deep
Stretched like a promontory sleeps or swims,
And seems a moving land, and at his gills
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Draws in, and at his trunk spouts out a sea.
Meanwhile the tepid caves, and fens and shores
Their brood as numerous hatch, from the egg that soon
Bursting with kindly
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rupture forth disclosed
Their callow
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young, but feathered soon and fledge
They summed their pens
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, and soaring th’ air sublime
With clang
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despised the ground, under a cloud
In prospect; there the eagle and the stork
On cliffs and cedar tops their eyries build:
Part loosely
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wing the region, part more wise
In common, ranged in figure wedge their way,
Intelligent
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of seasons, and set forth
Their airy caravan high over seas
Flying
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, and over lands with mutual wing
Easing their flight; so steers the prudent crane
Her annual voyage, borne on winds; the air
Floats
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, as they pass, fanned with unnumbered plumes:
From branch to branch the smaller birds with song
Solaced
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the woods, and spread their painted wings
Till ev’n, nor then the solemn nightingale
Ceased warbling, but all night tuned her soft lays:
Others on silver lakes and rivers bathed
Their downy breast; the swan with archèd neck
Between her white wings mantling
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proudly, rows
Her state
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with oary feet: yet oft they quit
The dank
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, and rising on stiff pennons, tower
The mid-aerial sky
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: others on ground
Walked firm; the crested cock whose clarion sounds
The silent hours, and th’ other
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whose gay train
Adorns him, colored with the florid hue
Of rainbows and starry eyes
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. The waters thus
With fish replenished, and the air with fowl,
Ev’ning and morn solemnized the fifth day.
“The sixth and of creation last arose
With ev’ning
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harps and matin, when God said,
‘Let th’ earth bring forth soul
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living in her kind,
Cattle and creeping things, and beast of the earth,
Each in their kind.’ The earth obeyed, and straight
Op’ning her fertile womb teemed
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at a birth
Innumerous living creatures, perfect forms,
Limbed and full-grown: out of the ground uprose
As from his lair the wild beast where he wons
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In forest wild, in thicket, brake, or den;
Among the trees in pairs they rose, they walked:
The cattle in the fields and meadows green:
Those rare
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and solitary, these in flocks
Pasturing at once, and in broad herds upsprung.
The grassy clods now calved, now half appeared
The tawny lion
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, pawing to get free
His hinder parts, then springs as broke from bonds,
And rampant shakes his brinded main; the ounce,
The libbard, and the tiger, as the mole