King James Bible Adam Clarke Bible Commentary Martin Luther's Writings Wesley's Sermons and Commentary Neurosemantics Audio / Video Bible Evolution Cruncher Creation Science Vincent New Testament Word Studies KJV Audio Bible Family videogames Christian author Godrules.NET Main Page Add to Favorites Godrules.NET Main Page




Bad Advertisement?

Are you a Christian?

Online Store:
  • Visit Our Store

  • GENESIS

    PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE    


    3. Genesis.

    (Author Uncertain.)

    In the beginning did the Lord create

    The heaven and earth:1 for formless was the land,2

    And hidden by the wave, and God immense3

    O'er the vast watery plains was hovering,

    5 While chaos and black darkness shrouded all:

    Which darkness, when God bade be from the pole4

    Disjoined, He speaks, "Let there be light; "and all

    In the clear world5 was bright. Then, when the Lord

    The first day's work had finished, He formed

    10 Heaven's axis white with nascent clouds: the deep

    Immense receives its wandering6 shores, and draws

    The rivers manifold with mighty trains.

    The third dun light unveiled earth's7 face, and soon

    (Its name assigned8 ) the dry land's story 'gins:

    15 Together on the windy champaigns rise

    The flowery seeds, and simultaneously

    Fruit-bearing boughs put forth procurvant arms.

    The fourth day, with9 the sun's lamp generates

    The moon, and moulds the stars with tremulous light

    20 Radiant: these elements it10 gave as signs

    To th' underlying world,11 to teach the times

    Which, through their rise and setting, were to change.

    Then, on the fifth, the liquid12 streams receive

    Their fish, and birds poise in the lower air

    25 Their pinions many-hued. The sixth. again,

    Supples the ice-cold snakes into their coils,

    And over the whole fields diffuses herds

    Of quadrupeds; and mandate gave that all

    Should grow with multiplying seed, and roam

    30 And feed in earth's immensity. All these

    When power divine by mere command arranged,

    Observing that things mundane still would lack

    A ruler, thus It13 speaks: "With utmost care,

    Assimilated to our own aspect,14

    35 Make We a man to reign in the whole orb."

    And him, although He with a single word15

    Could have compounded, yet Himself did deign

    To shape him with His sacred own right hand,

    Inspiring his dull breast from breast divine.

    40 Whom when He saw formed in a likeness such

    As is His own, He measures how he broods

    Alone on gnawing cares. Straight way his eyes

    With sleep irriguous He doth perfuse;

    That from his left rib woman softlier

    45 May formed be, and that by mixture twin

    His substance may add firmness to her limbs.

    To her the name of "Life"-which is called "Eve"16 -

    Is given: wherefore sons, as custom is,

    Their parents leave, and, with a settled home,

    50 Cleave to their wives.

    The seventh came, when God

    At His works' end did rest, decreeing it

    Sacred unto the coming ages' joys.

    Straightway-the crowds of living things deployed

    Before him-Adam's cunning skill (the gift

    55 Of the good Lord) gives severally to all

    The name which still is permanent. Himself,

    And, joined with him, his Eve, God deigns address

    "Grow, for the times to come, with manifold

    Increase, that with your seed the pole and earth17

    60 Be filled; and, as Mine heirs, the varied fruits

    Pluck ye, which groves and champaigns render you,

    From their rich turf." Thus after He discoursed,

    In gladsome court18 a paradise is strewn,

    And looks towards the rays of th' early sun.19

    65 These joys among, a tree with deadly fruits,

    Breeding, conjoined, the taste of life and death,

    Arises. In the midst of the demesne20

    Flows with pure tide a stream, which irrigates

    Fair offsprings from its liquid waves, and cuts

    70 Quadrified paths from out its bubbling fount

    Here wealthy Phison, with auriferous waves,

    Swells, and with hoarse tide wears21 conspicuous gems,

    This prasinus,22 that glowing carbuncle,23

    By name; and raves, transparent in its shoals,

    75 The margin of the land of Havilath.

    Next Gihon, gliding by the Aethiops,

    Enriches them. The Tigris is the third,

    Adjoined to fair Euphrates, furrowing

    Disjunctively with rapid flood the land

    80 Of Asshur. Adam, with his faithful wife,

    Placed here as guard and workman, is informed

    By such the Thunderer's24 speech: "Tremble ye not

    To pluck together the permitted fruits

    Which, with its leafy bough, the unshorn grove

    85 Hath furnished; anxious only lest perchance

    Ye cull the hurtful apple,25 which is green

    With a twin juice for functions several."

    And, no less blind meantime than Night herself,

    Deep night 'gan hold them, nor had e'en a robe

    90 Covered their new-formed limbs.

    Amid these haunts,

    And on mild berries reared, a foamy snake,

    Surpassing living things in sense astute,

    Was creeping silently with chilly coils.

    He, brooding over envious lies instinct

    95 With gnawing sense, tempts the soft heart beneath

    The woman's breast: "Tell me, why shouldst thou dread

    The apple's26 happy seeds? Why, hath not

    All known fruits hallowed?27 Whence if thou be prompt

    To cull the honeyed fruits, the golden world28

    100 Will on its starry pole return."29

    But she Refuses, and the boughs forbidden fears

    To touch. But yet her breast 'gins be o'er come

    With sense infirm. Straightway, as she at length

    With snowy tooth the dainty morsels bit,

    105 Stained with no cloud the sky serene up-lit!

    Then taste, instilling lure in honeyed jaws,

    To her yet uninitiated lord

    Constrained her to present the gift; which he

    No sooner took, then-night effaced!:-their eyes

    110 Shone out serene in the resplendent world.30

    When, then, they each their body bare espied,

    And when their shameful parts they see, with leaves

    Of fig they shadow them. By chance, beneath

    The sun's now setting light, they recognise

    115 The sound of the Lord's voice, and, trembling, haste

    To bypaths. Then the Lord of heaven accosts

    The mournful Adam: "Say, where now thou art."

    Who suppliant thus answers: "Thine address,

    O Lord, O Mighty One, I tremble at,

    120 Beneath my fearful heart; and, being bare,

    I faint with chilly dread." Then said the

    Lord:

    "Who hath the hurtful fruits, then, given you? "

    "This woman, while she tells me how her eyes

    With brilliant day promptly perfused were,

    125 And on her dawned the liquid sky serene,

    And heaven's sun and stars, o'ergave them me!"

    Forthwith God's anger frights perturbed Eve,

    While the Most High inquires the authorship

    Of the forbidden act. Hereon she opes

    130 Her tale: "The speaking serpent's suasive words

    I harboured, while the guile and bland request

    Misled me: for, with venoms viperous

    His words inweaving, stories told he me

    Of those delights which should all fruits excel."

    135 Straightway the Omnipotent the dragon's deeds

    Condemns, and bids him be to all a sight

    Unsightly, monstrous; bids him presently

    With grovelling beast to crawl; and then to bite

    And chew the soil; while war should to all time

    140 'Twixt human senses and his tottering self

    Be waged, that he might creep, crestfallen, prone,

    Behind the legs of men,31 -that while he glides

    Close on their heels they may down-trample him.

    The woman, sadly caught by guileful words,

    145 Is bidden yield her fruit with struggle hard,

    And bear her husband's yoke with patient zeal.32

    "But thou, to whom the sentence33 of the wife

    (Who, vanquished, to the dragon pitiless

    Yielded) seemed true, shalt through long times deplore

    150 Thy labour sad; for thou shalt see, instead

    Of wheaten harvest's seed, the thistle rise,

    And the thorn plenteously with pointed spines:

    So that, with weary heart and mournful breast,

    Full many sighs shall furnish anxious food;34

    155 Till, in the setting hour of coming death,

    To level earth, whence thou thy body draw'st,

    Thou be restored." This done, the Lord bestows

    Upon the trembling pair a tedious life;

    And from the sacred gardens far removes

    160 Them downcast, and locates them opposite,

    And from the threshold bars them by mid fire,

    Wherein from out the swift heat is evolved

    A cherubim,35 while fierce the hot point glows,

    And rolls enfolding flames. And lest their limbs

    165 With sluggish cold should be benumbed, the Lord

    Hides flayed from cattle's flesh together sews,

    With vestures warm their bare limbs covering.

    When, therefore, Adam-now believing-felt

    (By wedlock taught) his manhood, he confers

    170 On his loved wife the mother's name; and, made

    Successively by scions twain a sire,

    Gives names to stocks36 diverse: Cam the first

    Hath for his name, to whom is Abel joined.

    The latter's care tended the harmless sheep;

    175 The other turned the earth with curved plough.

    These, when in course of time37 they brought their gifts

    To Him who thunders, offered-as their sense

    Prompted them-fruits unlike. The elder one

    Offered the first-fruits38 of the fertile glebes:

    180 The other pays his vows with gentle lamb,

    Bearing in hand the entrails pure, and fat

    Snow-white; and to the Lord, who pious vows

    Beholds, is instantly acceptable.

    Wherefore with anger cold did Cain glow;39

    185 With whom God deigns to talk, and thus begins:

    "Tell Me, if thou live rightly, and discern

    Things hurtful, couldst thou not then pass shine age

    Pure from contracted guilt? Cease to essay

    With gnawing sense thy brother's ruin, who,

    190 Subject to thee as lord, his neck shall yield."

    Not e'en thus softened, he unto the fields

    Conducts his brother; whom when overta'en

    In lonely mead he saw, with his twin palms

    Bruising his pious throat, he crushed life out.

    195 Which deed the Lord espying from high heaven,

    Straitly demands "where Abel is on earth? "

    He says "he will not as his brother's guard

    Be set." Then God outspeaks to him again:

    "Doth not the sound of his blood's voice, sent up

    200 To Me, ascend unto heaven's lofty pole?

    Learn, therefore, for so great a crime what doom

    Shall wait thee. Earth, which with thy kinsman's blood

    Hath reeked but now, shall to thy hateful hand

    Refuse to render back the cursed seeds

    205 Entrusted her; nor shall, if set with herbs,

    Produce her fruit: that, torpid, thou shalt dash

    Thy limbs against each other with much fear."....

    PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - EARLY CHURCH FATHERS INDEX

    God  Rules.NET
    Search 30+ volumes of books at one time. Nave's Topical Bible Search Engine. Easton's Bible Dictionary Search Engine. Systematic Theology Search Engine.