Read Paradise Lost (Modern Library Classics) Online
Authors: John Milton,William Kerrigan,John Rumrich,Stephen M. Fallon
Is enmity, which he will put between
Me and mankind; I am to bruise his heel;
His seed, when is not set, shall bruise my head:
A world who would not purchase with a bruise,
Or much more grievous pain? Ye have th’ account
Of my performance: what remains, ye gods,
But up and enter now into full bliss.”
So having said, a while he stood, expecting
Their universal shout and high applause
To fill his ear, when contrary he hears
On all sides, from innumerable tongues
A dismal universal hiss, the sound
Of public scorn; he wondered
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, but not long
Had leisure, wond’ring at himself now more;
His visage drawn he felt to sharp and spare,
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His arms clung to his ribs, his legs entwining
Each other, till supplanted
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down he fell
A monstrous serpent on his belly prone,
Reluctant
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, but in vain; a greater power
Now ruled him, punished in the shape he sinned,
According to his doom
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: he would have spoke,
But hiss for hiss returned with forkèd tongue
To forkèd tongue, for now were all transformed
Alike, to serpents all as accessories
To his bold riot: dreadful was the din
Of hissing through the hall, thick swarming now
With complicated monsters head and tail,
Scorpion and asp, and amphisbaena
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dire,
Cerastes horned
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, hydrus, and ellops drear,
And dipsas
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(not so thick swarm’d once the soil
Bedropped with blood of Gorgon, or the Isle
Ophiusa
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); but still greatest he the midst,
Now dragon
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grown, larger than whom the sun
Engendered in the Pythian vale
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on slime,
Huge Python
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, and his power no less he seemed
Above the rest still to retain; they all
Him followed issuing forth to th’ open field,
Where all yet left of that revolted rout
Heav’n-fall’n, in station stood or just array,
Sublime
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with expectation when to see
ln triumph issuing forth their glorious chief;
They saw, but other sight instead, a crowd
Of ugly serpents; horror on them fell,
And horrid sympathy; for what they saw,
They felt themselves now changing; down their arms,
Down fell both spear and shield, down they as fast,
And the dire hiss renewed, and the dire form
Catched by contagion, like in punishment,
As in their crime. Thus was th’ applause they meant,
Turned to exploding hiss, triumph to shame
Cast on themselves from their own mouths. There stood
A grove hard by, sprung up with this their change,
His will who reigns above, to aggravate
Their penance, laden with fair fruit like that
Which grew in Paradise, the bait of Eve
Used by the Tempter: on that prospect strange
Their earnest eyes they fixed, imagining
For one forbidden tree a multitude
Now ris’n, to work them further woe or shame;
Yet parched
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with scalding thirst and hunger fierce,
Though to delude them sent, could not abstain,
But on they rolled in heaps, and up the trees
Climbing, sat thicker than the snaky locks
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That curled Megaera: greedily they plucked
The fruitage fair to sight, like that which grew
Near that bituminous lake where Sodom flamed;
This more delusive, not the touch, but taste
Deceived; they fondly thinking to allay
Their appetite with gust
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, instead of fruit
Chewed bitter ashes, which th’ offended taste
With spattering noise rejected: oft they assayed,
Hunger and thirst constraining, drugged
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as oft,
With hatefulest disrelish writhed their jaws
With soot and cinders filled; so oft they fell
Into the same illusion, not as man
Whom they triumphed once lapsed. Thus were they plagued
And worn with famine, long and ceaseless hiss,
Till their lost shape, permitted, they resumed,
Yearly enjoined, some say
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, to undergo
This annual humbling certain numbered days,
To dash their pride, and joy for man seduced.
However some
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tradition they dispersed
Among the heathen of their purchase got,
And fabled how the serpent, whom they called
Ophion with Eurynome, the wide-
Encroaching Eve perhaps, had first the rule
Of high Olympus, thence by Saturn driv’n
And Ops, ere yet Dictaean
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Jove was born.
Meanwhile in Paradise the Hellish pair
Too soon arrived, Sin there in power before,
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Once actual, now in body
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, and to dwell
Habitual habitant; behind her Death
Close following pace for pace, not mounted yet
On his pale horse
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: to whom Sin thus began.
“Second of Satan sprung, all conquering Death,
What think’st thou of our empire now, though earned
With travail difficult, not better far
Than still at Hell’s dark threshold to have sat watch,
Unnamed, undreaded, and thyself half starved?”
Whom thus the Sin-born monster answered soon.
“To me, who with eternal famine pine,
Alike is Hell, or Paradise, or Heaven,
There best, where most with ravin I may meet;
Which here, though plenteous, all too little seems
To stuff this maw, this vast unhidebound
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corpse.”
To whom th’ incestuous mother thus replied.
“Thou therefore on these herbs, and fruits, and flow’rs
Feed first, on each beast next, and fish, and fowl,
No homely morsels, and whatever thing
The scythe of Time mows down, devour unspared,
Till I in man residing through the race,
His thoughts, his looks, words, actions all infect,
And season him thy last and sweetest prey.”
This said, they both betook them several ways,
Both to destroy, or unimmortal
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make
All kinds, and for destruction to mature
Sooner or later; which th’ Almighty seeing,
From his transcendent seat the saints among,
To those bright orders uttered thus his voice.
“See with what heat these dogs of Hell advance
To waste and havoc
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yonder world, which I
So fair and good created, and had still
Kept in that state, had not the folly of man
Let in these wasteful Furies, who impute
Folly to me, so doth the Prince of Hell
And his adherents, that with so much ease
I suffer them to enter and possess
A place so Heav’nly, and conniving seem
To gratify my scornful enemies,
That laugh, as if transported with some fit
Of passion, I to them had quitted
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all,
At random yielded up to their misrule;
And know not that I called and drew them thither
My Hell-hounds, to lick up the draff
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and filth
Which man’s polluting sin with taint hath shed
On what was pure, till crammed and gorged, nigh burst
With sucked and glutted offal, at one sling
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Of thy victorious arm
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, well-pleasing Son,
Both Sin, and Death, and yawning grave at last
Through Chaos hurled, obstruct the mouth of Hell
Forever, and seal up his ravenous jaws.
Then heav’n and earth renewed shall be made pure
To sanctity that shall receive no stain:
Till then the curse pronounced on both precedes
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.”
He ended, and the Heav’nly audience loud
Sung hallelujah, as the sound of seas,
Through multitude that sung: “Just are thy ways,
Righteous are thy decrees on all thy works;
Who can extenuate
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thee? Next, to the Son,
Destined restorer of mankind, by whom
New heav’n and earth shall to the ages rise,
Or down from Heav’n descend.” Such was their song,
While the Creator calling forth by name
His mighty angels gave them several charge,
As sorted best with present things. The sun
Had first his precept so to move, so shine,
As might affect the Earth with cold and heat
Scarce tolerable, and from the north to call
Decrepit winter, from the south to bring
Solstitial summer’s heat. To the blank
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moon
Her office they prescribed, to th’ other five
Their planetary motions and aspects
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In sextile
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, square, and trine, and opposite,
Of noxious efficacy, and when to join
In synod
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unbenign, and taught the fixed
Their influence malignant when to show’r,
Which of them rising with the sun, or falling,
Should prove tempestuous: to the winds they set
Their corners, when with bluster to confound
Sea, air, and shore, the thunder when to roll
With terror through the dark aerial hall.
Some say he bid his angels turn askance
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The poles of Earth twice ten degrees and more
From the sun’s axle; they with labor pushed
Oblique the centric globe: some say the sun
Was bid
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turn reins from th’ equinoctial road
Like distant breadth to Taurus with the sev’n
Atlantic Sisters, and the Spartan Twins
Up to the Tropic Crab; thence down amain
By Leo and the Virgin and the Scales,
As deep as Capricorn, to bring in change
Of seasons to each clime; else had the spring
Perpetual smiled on Earth with vernant flow’rs,
Equal in days and nights, except to those
Beyond the polar circles; to them day
Had unbenighted shone, while the low sun
To recompense his distance, in their sight
Had rounded still th’ horizon, and not known
Or east or west, which had forbid the snow
From cold Estotiland
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, and south as far
Beneath Magellan
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. At that tasted fruit
The sun, as from Thyestean banquet
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, turned
His course intended; else how had the world
Inhabited, though sinless, more than now,
Avoided pinching cold and scorching heat?
These changes in the heav’ns, though slow, produced
Like change on sea and land, sideral blast
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,
Vapor, and mist, and exhalation hot,
Corrupt and pestilent: now from the north
Of Norumbega
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, and the Samoed shore
Bursting their brazen dungeon
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, armed with ice
And snow and hail and stormy gust and flaw,
Boreas and
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Caecias and Argestes loud
And Thrascias rend the woods and seas upturn;
With adverse blast upturns them from the south
Notus and Afer black with thund’rous clouds
From Serraliona; thwart of these as fierce
Forth rush the Levant and the ponent winds
Eurus and Zephyr with their lateral noise,
Sirocco, and Libecchio. Thus began
Outrage from lifeless things; but Discord first
Daughter of Sin, among th’ irrational,
Death introduced through fierce antipathy:
Beast now with beast gan war, and fowl with fowl,
And fish with fish; to graze the herb all leaving,
Devoured each other; nor stood much in awe
Of man, but fled him, or with count’nance grim
Glared on him passing: these
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were from without
The growing miseries, which Adam saw
Already in part, though hid in gloomiest shade,
To sorrow abandoned, but worse felt within,
And in a troubled sea of passion tossed,
Thus to disburden sought with sad complaint.
“O miserable of happy! Is this the end
Of this new glorious world, and me so late
The glory of that glory? Who now become
Accursed of blessed; hide me from the face
Of God, whom to behold was then my highth
Of happiness: yet well, if here would end
The misery, I deserved it, and would bear
My own deservings; but this will not serve;
All that I eat or drink, or shall beget,
Is propagated curse
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. O voice once heard
Delightfully, ‘Increase and multiply,’
Now death to hear! For what can I increase
Or multiply, but curses on my head?
Who of all ages to succeed, but feeling
The evil on him brought by me, will curse
My head, ‘Ill fare our ancestor impure,
For this we may thank Adam’? But his thanks
Shall be the execration; so besides
Mine own that bide upon me, all from me
Shall with a fierce reflux on me redound,
On me
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as on their natural center light
Heavy, though in their place. O fleeting joys
Of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes!
Did I
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request thee, Maker, from my clay
To mold me man, did I solicit thee
From darkness to promote me, or here place