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Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 1
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Edmund Spenser

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 242


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

An Hymne Of Heavenly Beavtie

Rapt  with  the  rage  of  mine  own  rauisht  thought,
Through  cõtemplation  of  those  goodly  sights,
And  glorious  images  in  heauen  wrought,
Whose  wõdrous  beauty  breathing  sweet  delights,
Do  kindle  loue  in  high  conceipted  sprights:
I  faine  to  tell  the  things  that  I  behold,
But  feele  my  wits  to  faile,  and  tongue  to  fold.  
Vouchsafe  then,  ô  thou  most  almightie  Spright,
From  whom  all  guifts  of  wit  and  knowledge  flow,
To  shed  into  my  breast  some  sparckling  light
Of  thine  eternall  Truth,  that  I  may  show
Some  litle  beames  to  mortall  eyes  below,
Of  that  immortall  beautie,  there  with  thee,
Which  in  my  weake  distraughted  mynd  I  see.
That  with  the  glorie  of  so  goodly  sight,
The  hearts  of  men,  which  fondly  here  admyre
Faire  seeming  shewes,  and  feed  on  vaine  delight,
Transported  with  celestiall  desyre
Of  those  faire  formes,  may  lift  themselues  vp  hyer,
And  learne  to  loue  with  zealous  humble  dewty
Th'eternall  fountaine  of  that  heauenly  beauty.
Beginning  then  below,  with  th'easie  vew
Of  this  base  world,  subiect  to  fleshly  eye,
From  thence  to  mount  aloft  by  order  dew,
To  contemplation  of  th'immortall  sky,
Of  the  soare  faulcon  so  I  learne  to  fly,
That  flags  awhile  her  fluttering  wings  beneath,
Till  she  her  selfe  for  stronger  flight  can  breath.
Then  looke  who  list,  thy  gazefull  eyes  to  feed
With  sight  of  that  is  faire,  looke  on  the  frame
Of  this  wyde  vniuerse,  and  therein  reed
The  endlesse  kinds  of  creatures,  which  by  name
Thou  canst  not  coũt,  much  lesse  their  natures  aime:
All  which  are  made  with  wondrous  wide  respect,
And  all  with  admirable  beautie  deckt.
First  th'Earth,  on  adamantine  pillars  founded,
Amid  the  Sea  engirt  with  brasen  bands;
The  th'Aire  still  flitting,  but  yet  firmely  bounded
On  euerie  side,  with  pyles  of  flaming  brands,
Neuer  consum'd  nor  quencht  with  mortall  hands;
And  last,  that  mightie  shining  christall  wall,
Wherewith  he  had  encompassed  this  All.
By  view  whereof,  it  plainely  may  appeare,  
That  still  as  euery  thing  doth  vpward  tend,
And  further  is  from  earth,  so  still  more  cleare
And  faire  it  growes,  till  to  his  perfect  end
Of  purest  beautie,  it  at  last  ascend:
Ayre  more  then  water,  fire  much  more  then  ayre,
And  heauen  then  fire  appeares  more  pure  &  fayre.
Looke  thou  no  further,  but  affixe  thine  eye,
On  that  bright  shynie  round  still  mouing  Masse,
The  house  of  blessed  Gods,  which  men  call  Skye,
All  sowd  with  glistring  stars  more  thicke  th&etilde;  grasse,
Whereof  each  other  doth  in  brightnesse  passe;
But  those  two  most,  which  ruling  night  and  day,
As  King  and  Queene,  the  heauens  Empire  sway.
And  tell  me  then,  what  hast  thou  euer  seene,
That  to  their  beautie  may  compared  bee,
Or  can  the  sight  that  is  most  sharpe  and  keene,
Endure  their  Captains  flaming  head  to  see?
How  much  lesse  those,  much  higher  in  degree,
And  so  much  fairer,  and  much  more  then  these,
As  these  are  fairer  then  the  land  and  seas?
For  farre  aboue  these  heauens  which  here  we  see,
Be  others  farre  exceeding  these  in  light,
Not  bounded,  not  corrupt,  as  these  same  bee,
But  infinite  in  largenesse,  and  in  hight,
Vnmouing,  vncorrupt,  and  spotlesse  bright,
That  need  no  Sunne  t'illuminate  their  spheres,
But  their  owne  natiue  light  farre  passing  theirs.
And  as  these  heauens  still  by  degrees  arize,
Vntill  they  come  to  their  first  Mouers  bound,
That  in  his  mightie  compasse  doth  comprize,
And  carrie  all  the  rest  with  him  around,
So  those  likewise  doe  by  degrees  redound,
And  rise  more  faire,  till  they  at  last  ariue
To  the  most  faire,  whereto  they  all  do  striue.
Faire  is  the  heauen,  where  happie  soules  haue  place,
In  full  enioyment  of  felicitie,
Whence  they  doe  still  behold,  the  glorious  face
Of  the  diuine  eternall  Maiestie  ;
More  faire  is  that,  where  those  Idees  on  hie
Enraunged  be,  which  Plato  so  admyred,
And  pure  Intelligences  from  God  inspyred.
Yet  fairer  is  that  heauen,  in  which  doe  raine
The  soueraine  Powres  and  mightie  Potentates,
Which  in  their  high  protections  doe  containe
All  mortall  Princes,  and  imperiall  States;
And  fayrer  yet,  whereas  the  royall  Seates
And  heauenly  Dominations  are  set,
From  whom  all  earthly  gouernance  is  fet.
Yet  farre  more  faire  be  those  bright  Cherubins,
Which  all  with  golden  wings  are  ouerdight,
And  those  eternall  burning  Seraphins,
Which  from  their  faces  dart  out  fierie  light;
Yet  fairer  then  they  both,  and  much  more  bright
Be  th'Angels  and  Archangels,  which  attend
On  Gods  owne  person,  without  rest  or  end.
These  thus  in  faire  each  other  farre  excelling,
As  to  the  Highest  they  approach  more  neare,
Yet  is  that  Highest  farre  beyond  all  telling,
Fairer  then  all  the  rest  which  there  appeare,
Though  all  their  beauties  ioynd  together  were:
How  then  can  mortall  tongue  hope  to  expresse,
The  image  of  such  endlesse  perfectnesse?
Cease  then  my  tongue,  and  lend  vnto  my  mynd
Leaue  to  bethinke  how  great  that  beautie  is,
Whose  vtmost  parts  so  beautifull  I  fynd,
How  much  more  those  essentiall  parts  of  his,
His  truth,  his  loue,  his  wisedome,  and  his  blis,
His  grace,  his  doome,  his  mercy  and  his  might,
By  which  he  lends  vs  of  himselfe  a  sight.
Those  vnto  all  he  daily  doth  display
And  shew  himselfe  in  th'image  of  his  grace,
As  in  a  looking  glasse,  through  which  he  may
Be  seene,  of  all  his  creatures  vile  and  base,
That  are  vnable  else  to  see  his  face,
His  glorious  face  which  glistereth  else  so  bright,
That  th'Angels  selues  can  not  endure  his  sight.
But  we  fraile  wights,  whose  sight  cannot  sustaine
The  Suns  bright  beames,  wh&etilde;  he  on  vs  doth  shyne,
But  that  their  points  rebutted  backe  againe
Are  duld,  how  can  we  see  with  feeble  eyne,
The  glory  of  that  Maiestie  diuine,
In  sight  of  whom  both  Sun  and  Moone  are  darke,
Compared  to  his  least  resplendent  spark?
The  meanes  therefore  which  vnto  vs  is  lent,
Him  to  behold,  is  on  his  workes  to  looke,
Which  he  hath  made  in  beauty  excellent,
And  in  same,  as  in  a  brasen  booke,
To  reade  enregistred  in  euery  nooke
His  goodnesse,  which  his  beautie  doth  declare,
For  all  thats  good,  is  beautifull  and  faire.
Thence  gathering  plumes  of  perfect  speculation,
To  impe  the  wings  of  thy  high  flying  mynd,
Mount  vp  aloft  through  heauenly  contemplation,
From  this  darke  world,  whose  damps  the  soule  do  blynd,
And  like  the  natiue  brood  of  Eagles  kynd,
On  that  bright  Sunne  of  glorie  fixe  thine  eyes,
Clear'd  from  grosse  mists  of  fraile  infirmities,
Humbled  with  feare  and  awfull  reuerence,
Before  the  footestoole  of  his  Maiestie,
Throw  thy  selfe  downe  with  trembling  innocence,
Ne  dare  looke  vp  with  corruptible  eye,
On  the  dred  face  of  that  great  Deity,
For  feare,  lest  if  he  chaunce  to  looke  on  thee,  
Thou  turne  to  nought,  and  quite  confounded  be.
But  lowly  fall  before  his  mercie  seat,
Close  couered  with  the  Lambes  integrity,
From  the  iust  wrath  of  his  auengefull  threate,
That  sits  vpon  the  righteous  throne  on  hy:
His  throne  is  built  vpon  Eternity,
More  firme  and  durable  then  steele  or  brasse,
Or  the  hard  diamond,  which  them  both  doth  passe.
His  scepter  is  the  rod  of  Righteousnesse,
With  which  he  bruseth  all  his  foes  to  dust,
And  the  great  Dragon  strongly  doth  represse,
Vnder  the  rigour  of  his  iudgement  iust;
His  seate  is  Truth,  to  which  the  faithfull  trust;
Frõ  whence  proceed  her  beames  so  pure  &  bright,
That  all  about  him  sheddeth  glorious  light.
Light  farre  exceeding  that  bright  blazing  sparke,
Which  darted  is  from  Titans  flaming  head,
That  with  his  beames  enlumineth  the  darke
And  dampish  aire,  wherby  al  things  are  red:
Whose  nature  yet  so  much  is  maruelled
Of  mortall  wits,  that  it  doth  much  amaze
The  greatest  wisards,  which  thereon  do  gaze.
But  that  immortall  light  which  there  doth  shine,
Is  many  [thousand]  times  more  bright,  more  cleare,
More  excellent,  more  glorious,  more  diuine,
Through  which  to  God  all  mortall  actions  here,
And  euen  the  thoughts  of  men  do  plaine  appeare:
For  from  th'eternall  Truth  it  doth  proceed,
Through  heauenly  virtue,  which  her  beames  doe  breed.
With  the  great  glorie  of  that  wondrous  light,
His  throne  is  all  encompassed  around,
And  hid  in  his  owne  brightnesse  from  the  sight
Of  all  that  looke  thereon  with  eyes  vnsound:
And  vnderneath  his  feet  are  to  be  found,
Thunder,  and  lightning,  and  tempestuous  fyre,
The  instruments  of  his  auenging  yre.
There  in  his  bosome  Sapience  doth  sit,
The  soueraine  dearling  of  the  Deity,
Clad  like  a  Queene  in  royall  robes,  most  fit
For  so  great  powre  and  perelesse  maiestie.
And  all  with  gemmes  and  iewels  gorgeously
Adornd,  that  brighter  then  the  starres  appeare,
And  make  her  natiue  brightnes  seem  more  cleare.
And  on  her  head  a  crowne  of  purest  gold
is  set,  in  signe  of  highest  soueraignty,
And  in  her  hand  a  scepter  she  doth  hold,
With  which  she  rules  the  house  of  God  on  hy,
And  menageth  the  euer-mouing  sky,
And  in  the  same  these  lower  creatures  all,
Subiected  to  her  powre  imperiall.
Both  heauen  and  earth  obey  vnto  her  will,
And  all  the  creatures  which  they  both  containe:
For  of  her  fulnesse  which  the  world  doth  fill,
They  all  partake,  and  do  in  state  remaine,  
As  their  great  Maker  did  at  first  ordaine,
Through  obseruation  of  her  high  beheast,
By  which  they  first  were  made,  and  still  increast.
The  fairenesse  of  her  face  no  tongue  can  tell,
For  she  the  daughters  of  all  wemens  race,
And  Angels  eke,  in  beautie  doth  excell,
Sparkled  on  her  from  Gods  owne  glorious  face,
And  more  increast  by  her  owne  goodly  grace,
That  it  doth  farre  exceed  all  humane  thought,
Ne  can  on  earth  compared  be  to  ought.
Ne  could  that  Painter  (had  he  liued  yet)
Which  pictured  Venus  with  so  curious  quill,
That  all  posteritie  admyred  it,
Haue  purtrayd  this,  for  all  his  maistring  skill;
Ne  she  her  selfe,  had  she  remained  still,
And  were  as  faire,  as  fabling  wits  do  fayne,
Could  once  come  neare  this  beauty  souerayne.
But  had  those  wits  the  wonders  of  their  dayes,
Or  that  sweete  Teian  Poet  which  did  spend
His  plenteous  vaine  in  setting  forth  her  prayse,
Seene  but  a  glims  of  this,  which  I  pretend,
How  wondrously  would  he  her  face  commend,
Aboue  that  Idole  of  his  fayning  thought,
That  all  the  world  should  with  his  rimes  be  fraught?
How  then  dare  I,  the  nouice  of  his  Art,
Presume  to  picture  so  diuine  a  wight,
Or  hope  t'expresse  her  least  perfections  part,
Whose  beautie  filles  the  heauens  with  her  light,
And  darkes  the  earth  with  shadow  of  her  sight?
Ah  gentle  Muse  thou  art  too  weake  and  faint,
The  pourtraict  of  so  heauenly  hew  to  paint.
Let  Angels  which  her  goodly  face  behold
And  see  at  will,  her  soueraigne  praises  sing,
And  those  most  sacred  mysteries  vnfold,
Of  that  faire  loue  of  mightie  heauens  king.
Enough  is  me  t'admyre  so  heauenly  thing.
And  being  thus  with  her  huge  loue  possest,
In  th'only  wonder  of  her  selfe  to  rest.
But  who  so  may,  thrise  happie  man  him  hold,
Of  all  on  earth,  whom  God  so  much  doth  grace,
And  lets  his  owne  Beloued  to  behold:
For  in  the  view  of  her  celestiall  face,
All  ioy,  all  blisse,  all  happinesse  haue  place,
Ne  ought  on  earth  can  want  vnto  the  wight,
Who  of  her  selfe  can  win  the  wishfull  sight.
For  she  out  of  her  secret  threasury,
Plentie  of  riches  forth  on  him  will  powre,
Euen  heauenly  riches,  which  there  hidden  ly
With  in  the  closet  of  her  chastest  bowre,
Th'eternall  portion  of  her  precious  dowre,
Which  mighty  God  hath  giuen  to  her  free,
Ant  to  all  those  which  thereof  worthy  bee.
None  thereof  worthy  be,  but  those  whom  shee
Vouchsafeth  to  her  presence  to  receaue,
And  letteth  them  her  louely  face  to  see,
Whereof  such  wondrous  pleasures  they  conceaue,
And  sweete  contentment,  that  it  doth  bereaue
Their  soule  of  sense,  through  infinite  delight,
And  them  transport  from  flesh  into  the  spright.
In  which  they  see  such  admirable  things,
As  carries  them  into  an  extasy,
And  heare  such  heauenly  notes,  and  carolings
Of  Gods  high  praise,  that  filles  the  brasen  sky,
And  feele  such  ioy  and  pleasure  inwardly,
That  maketh  them  all  worldly  cares  forget,
And  onely  thinke  on  that  before  them  set.
Ne  from  thenceforth  doth  any  fleshly  sense,
Or  idle  thought  of  earthly  things  remaine,
But  all  that  earst  seemd  sweet,  seemes  now  offense,
And  all  that  pleased  earst,  now  seemes  to  paine,
Their  ioy,  their  comfort,  their  desire,  their  gaine,
Is  fixed  all  on  that  which  now  they  see,
All  other  sights  but  fayned  shadowes  bee.
And  that  faire  lampe,  which  vseth  to  enflame
The  hearts  of  men  with  selfe  consuming  fyre,
Thenceforth  seemes  fowle,  &  full  of  sinfull  blame;
And  all  that  pompe,  to  which  proud  minds  aspyre
By  name  of  honor,  and  so  much  desyre,
Seemes  to  them  basenesse,  and  all  riches  drosse,
And  all  mirth  sadnesse,  and  all  lucre  losse.
So  full  their  eyes  are  of  that  glorious  sight,
And  senses  fraught  with  such  satietie,
That  in  nought  else  on  earth  can  they  delight,
But  in  th'aspect  of  that  felicitie,
Which  they  haue  written  in  their  inward  ey;
On  which  they  feed,  and  in  their  fastened  mynd
All  happie  ioy  and  full  contentment  fynd.
Ah  then  my  hungry  soule,  which  long  hast  fed
On  idle  fancies  of  thy  foolish  thought,
And  with  false  beauties  flattring  bait  misled,
Hast  after  vaine  deceiptfull  shadowes  sought,
Which  all  are  fled,  and  now  haue  left  thee  nought,
But  late  repentance  through  thy  follies  prief;
Ah  cease  to  gaze  on  matter  of  thy  grief.
And  looke  at  last  vp  to  that  soueraine  light,
From  whose  pure  beams  al  perfect  beauty  springs,
That  kindleth  loue  in  euery  godly  spright,
Euen  the  loue  of  God,  which  loathing  brings
Of  this  vile  world,  and  these  gay  seeming  things;
With  whose  sweete  pleasures  being  so  possest,
Thy  straying  thoughts  henceforth  for  euer  rest.

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