| [Paradise Lost by John Milton]@TWC D-Link bookParadise Lost PARADISELOST
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  But God who oft descends to visit men  Unseen, and through thir habitations walks  To mark thir doings, them beholding soon,  Comes down to see thir Citie, ere the Tower  Obstruct Heav'n Towrs, and in derision sets  Upon thir Tongues a various Spirit to rase  Quite out thir Native Language, and instead  To sow a jangling noise of words unknown:  Forthwith a hideous gabble rises loud  Among the Builders; each to other calls  Not understood, till hoarse, and all in rage,  As mockt they storm; great laughter was in Heav'n  And looking down, to see the hubbub strange  And hear the din; thus was the building left  Ridiculous, and the work Confusion nam'd.  Whereto thus ADAM fatherly displeas'd.  O execrable Son so to aspire  Above his Brethren, to himself affirming  Authoritie usurpt, from God not giv'n:  He gave us onely over Beast, Fish, Fowl  Dominion absolute; that right we hold  By his donation; but Man over men  He made not Lord; such title to himself  Reserving, human left from human free.  But this Usurper his encroachment proud  Stayes not on Man; to God his Tower intends  Siege and defiance: Wretched man! what food  Will he convey up thither to sustain  Himself and his rash Armie, where thin Aire  Above the Clouds will pine his entrails gross,  And famish him of Breath, if not of Bread?To whom thus MICHAEL.
  Justly thou abhorr'st  That Son, who on the quiet state of men  Such trouble brought, affecting to subdue  Rational Libertie; yet know withall,  Since thy original lapse, true Libertie  Is lost, which alwayes with right Reason dwells  Twinn'd, and from her hath no dividual being:  Reason in man obscur'd, or not obeyd,  Immediately inordinate desires  And upstart Passions catch the Government  From Reason, and to servitude reduce  Man till then free. <<Back  Index  Next>>
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