Who e'er while the happy Garden fung, By one man's Difobedience loft, now fing Recover'd Paradise to all mankind,
By one man's firm Obedience fully try'd Through all temptation, and the Tempter foil'd In all his wiles, defeated and repuls'd,
And Eden rais'd in the wafte Wilderness.
Thou Spirit who ledst this glorious Eremite
Into the Defart, his Victorious Field
Against the spiritual Foe, and brought'ft him thence By proof the undoubted Son of God, infpire, As thou art wont, my prompted Song else mute,
And bear thro' heighth or depth of Nature's bounds With profperous wing full fumm'd to tell of deeds Above Heroic, though in fecret done,
And unrecorded left through many an Age, Worthy t'have not remain❜d so long unfung.
Now had the great Proclaimer with a voice More awful than the found of Trumpet, cry'd Repentance, and Heaven's Kingdom nigh at hand To all Baptiz'd: to his great Baptism flock'd With awe the Regions round, and with them came From Nazareth the Son of Jofeph deem'd
To the flood Jordan came, as then obfcure, Unmarkt, unknown; but him the Baptist foon Descry'd, divinely warn'd, and witness bore As to his worthier, and would have resign'd To him his Heavenly Office, nor was long His witness unconfirm'd: on him baptiz'd Heav'n open'd, and in likeness of a Dove The Spirit defcended, while the Father's voice From Heav'n pronounc'd him his beloved Son. That heard the Adversary, who roving still About the World, at that Affembly fam'd Would not be laft, and with the voice divine
Nigh Thunder-ftruck, th' exalted man, to whom Such high atteft was giv'n, a while furvey'd With wonder, then with envy fraught, and rage, Flies to his place, nor refts, but in mid air To Council fummons all his mighty Peers, Within thick Clouds and dark ten-fold involv'd, A gloomy Confiftory; and them amidst With looks agaft and fad he thus bespake.
O ancient Pow'rs of Air and this wide world, For much more willingly I mention Air, This our old Conqueft, than remember Hell
Our hated habitation; well ye How many Ages, as the years This Universe we have poffeft, and rul'd In manner at our will th' affairs of Earth, Since Adam and his facil confort Eve
Loft Paradife deceiv'd by me, though fince With dread attending when that fatal wound Shall be inflicted by the Seed of Eve Upon my head, long the decrees of Heav'n Delay, for longest time to him is fhort; And now too soon for us the circling hours This dreaded time have compaft, wherein we
Muft bide the ftroak of that long threaten'd wound,
At least if fo we can, and by the head
Broken be not intended all our power
To be infring'd, our freedom and our being. In this fair Empire won of Earth and Air; For this ill news I bring, the Woman's feed Destin❜d to this, is late of Woman born, His Birth to our juft fear gave no fmall caufe, But his growth now to youth's full flow'r,difplaying All virtue, grace, and wisdom to atchieve Things highest, greatest, multiplies my Before him a great Prophet, to proclaim His coming, is fent Harbinger, who all Invites, and in the Confecrated streami Pretends to wash off fin, and fit them fo Purifi'd to receive him pure, or rather To do him honour as their King; all come, And he himself among them was Baptiz'd, Not thence to be more pure, but to receive The Testimony of Heav'n, that who he is Thenceforth the Nations may not doubt; I faw The Prophet do him reverence, on him rising Out of the Water, Heav'n above the Clouds
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