In fhady circles, like the moon beheld From earth, when the her unenlighten'd face Turns thitherward opaque: a space they brood In congregated clouds; then breaking float To all fides round. Dilated fome and denfe, Broad as earth's furface each, by flow degrees Spread from the confines of the light along, Ufurping half the fphere, and fwim obfcure On to its adverse coaft; till there they fet, Or vanish scatter'd: measuring thus the time, That round its axle whirls the radiant orb.
Faireft of beings! first-created light! Prime cause of beauty! for from thee alone, The fparkling gem, the vegetable race,
The nobler worlds that live and breathe, their charms,
The lovely hues peculiar to each tribe,
From thy unfailing source of splendor draw!
In thy pure fhine, with transport I survey This firmament, and these her rolling worlds, Their magnitudes, and motions: thofe how vaft! How rapid these with fwiftne's unconceiv'd, From west to east in folemn pomp revolv'd, Unerring, undisturb'd; the sun's bright train, Progreffive through the fky's light fluent borne Around their centre. Mercury the first, Near bordering on the day, with speedy wheel Flies fwifteft on, inflaming where he comes, With sevenfold splendor, all his azure road.
Next Venus to the westward of the fun, Full orb'd her face, a golden plain of light,
Circles her larger round. Fair morning-star! That leads on dawning day to yonder world, The feat of man, hung in the heavens remote,- Whofe northern hemifphere, defcending, fees The fun arife; as through the zodiac-roll'd, Full in the middle path oblique fhe winds Her annual orb: and by her fide the Moon, Campanion of her flight, whofe folemn beams, Nocturnal, to her darken'd globe supply A fofter day-light; whose attractive power Swells all her feas and oceans into tides, From the mid-deeps o'erflowing to their fhores, Beyond the sphere of Mars, in diftant skies, Revolves the mighty magnitude of Jove, With kingly state, the rival of the fun. About him round, four planetary moons, On earth with wonder all night long beheld, Moon above moon, his fair attendants, dance. Thefe, in th' horizon, flow-afcending climb. The steep of heaven, and, mingling in foft flow Their filver radiance, brighten as they rife. Those oppofite roll downward from their noon To where the fhade of Jove, outstretch'd in length A dusky cone immenfe, darkens the fky
Through many a region. To these bounds arriv'd, A gradual pale creeps dim o'er each fad orb, Fading their luftre; till they fink involv'd In total night, and disappear eclips'd. By this, the Sage, who, ftudious of the skies, Heedful explores thefe late-discover'd worlds,
By this obferv'd, the rapid progress finds
Of light itfelf: how fwift the headlong ray Shoots from the fun's height through unbounded space, At once enlightning air, and earth, and heaven. Laft, outmost Saturn walks his frontier-round, The boundary of worlds; with his pale moons, Faint-glimmering through the darkness night has thrown, Deep-dy'd and dead, o'er this chill globe forlorn : An endless defert, where extreme of cold Eternal fits, as in his native feat,
On wintery hills of never thawing ice! Such Saturn's earth; and yet ev'n here the fight, Amid thefe doleful fcenes, new matter finds Of wonder and delight! a mighty ring, On each side rifing from th' horizon's verge, Self-pois'd in air, with its bright circle round: Encompaffeth his orb. As night comes on, Saturn's broad fhade, caft on its eastern arch, Climbs flowly to its height and at th' approach Of morn returning, with like stealthy pace Draws weftward off; till though the lucid round,. In diftant view th' illumin'd fkies are feen.
Beauteous appearance! by th' Almighty's handi Peculiar fashion'd.-Thine these noble works, Great, univerfal Ruler! earth and heaven Are thine, fpontaneous offspring of thy will, Seen with tranfcendent ravifhment fublime, That lifts the foul to thee! a holy joy, By reason prompted, and by reafon swell 'd Beyond all height-for thou art infinite!
Thy virtual energy the frame of things Pervading actuates: as at first thy hand Diffus'd through endless space this limpid sky, Vast ocean without storm, where these huge globes Sail undisturb'd, a rounding voyage each Obfervant all of one unchanging law. Simplicity divine! by this fole rule,
The Maker's great establishment, these worlds Revolve harmonious, world attracting world With mutual love, and to their central fun All gravitating: now with quicken'd pace Defcending toward the primal orb, and now Receding flow, excurfive from his bounds.
This fpring of motion, this hid power Through univerfal nature, firft was known To thee, great Newton! Britain's jufteft pride, The boast of human race; whofe towering thought,
In her amazing progrefs unconfin'd,
From truth to truth afcending, gain'd the height
Of fcience, whither mankind from afar
Gaze up aftonish'd. Now beyond that height,
By death from frail mortality set free,
A pure intelligence he wings his way
Through wondrous fcenes, new-open'd in the world Invifible, amid the general quire
Of faints and angels, rapt with joy divine, Which fills, o'erflows, and ravishes the foul! His mind's clear vision from all darknefs purg'd, For God himself shines forth immediate there, Through thofe eternal climes, the frame of things,
In its ideal harmony, to him
Stands all reveal'd.
But how fhall mortal wing
Attempt this blue profundity of heaven, Unfathomable, endless of extent !
Where unknown funs to unknown systems rife, Whofe numbers who shall tell? ftupenduous hoft! In flaming millions through the vacant hung, Sun beyond fun, and world to world unseen, Measureless distance, unconceiv'd by thought! Awful their order; each the central fire
Of his furrounding ftars, whofe whirling speed, Solemn and filent, through the pathlefs void, Nor change, nor error knows. But, their ways, By reafon, bold adventurer, unexplor'd, Instructed can declare! What fearch shall find Their times and feafons! their appointed laws, Peculiar their inhabitants of life, And of intelligence, from feale to scale Harmonious rifing and in fix'd degree; Numberless orders, each refembling each, Yet all diverfe!-Tremendous depth and height Of wisdom and of power, that this great whole Fram'd inexpreffible, and still preferves, An infinite of wonders!-Thou, fupreme, First, Independent Caufe, whofe prefence fills Nature's vaft circle, and whof, pleasure moves, Father of human kind! the Mufe's wing Sustaining guide, while to the heights of heaven, Roaming the interminable vaft of space,
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