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Paradise Regained



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THE FIRST BOOK

  I, WHO erewhile the happy Garden sung  By one man's disobedience lost, now sing  Recovered Paradise to all mankind,  By one man's firm obedience fully tried  Through all temptation, and the Tempter foiled  In all his wiles, defeated and repulsed,  And Eden raised in the waste Wilderness.    Thou Spirit, who led'st this glorious Eremite  Into the desert, his victorious field  Against the spiritual foe, and brought'st him thence 10  By proof the undoubted Son of God, inspire,  As thou art wont, my prompted song, else mute,  And bear through highth or depth of Nature's bounds,  With prosperous wing full summed, to tell of deeds  Above heroic, though in secret done,  And unrecorded left through many an age:  Worthy to have not remained so long unsung.    Now had the great Proclaimer, with a voice  More awful than the sound of trumpet, cried  Repentance, and Heaven's kingdom nigh at hand 20  To all baptized. To his great baptism flocked  With awe the regions round, and with them came  From Nazareth the son of Joseph deemed  To the flood Jordan—came as then obscure,  Unmarked, unknown. But him the Baptist soon  Descried, divinely warned, and witness bore  As to his worthier, and would have resigned  To him his heavenly office. Nor was long  His witness unconfirmed: on him baptized  Heaven opened, and in likeness of a Dove 30  The Spirit descended, while the Father's voice  From Heaven pronounced him his beloved Son.  That heard the Adversary, who, roving still  About the world, at that assembly famed  Would not be last, and, with the voice divine  Nigh thunder-struck, the exalted man to whom  Such high attest was given a while surveyed  With wonder; then, with envy fraught and rage,  Flies to his place, nor rests, but in mid air  To council summons all his mighty Peers, 40  Within thick clouds and dark tenfold involved,  A gloomy consistory; and them amidst,  With looks aghast and sad, he thus bespake:—    "O ancient Powers of Air and this wide World  (For much more willingly I mention Air,  This our old conquest, than remember Hell,  Our hated habitation), well ye know  How many ages, as the years of men,  This Universe we have possessed, and ruled  In manner at our will the affairs of Earth, 50  Since Adam and his facile consort Eve  Lost Paradise, deceived by me, though since  With dread attending when that fatal wound  Shall be inflicted by the seed of Eve  Upon my head. Long the decrees of Heaven  Delay, for longest time to Him is short;  And now, too soon for us, the circling hours  This dreaded time have compassed, wherein we  Must bide the stroke of that long-threatened wound  (At least, if so we can, and by the head 60  Broken be not intended all our power  To be infringed, our freedom and our being  In this fair empire won of Earth and Air)—  For this ill news I bring: The Woman's Seed,  Destined to this, is late of woman born....