Religio Laici; Or, A Layman's Faith Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A B CDE FG H BGI J B KL M K J N G K O BBPPJJJJJQQRRKKSSBBK KKTTUUVVWWXXYYYZZA2A 2KK VVB2B2GGC2C2JJKKUUJJ TTD2E2 JJRRUUQQKKJJVVF2F2G2 G2H2H2KKI2J2J2KKK2L2 M2X KKN2AO2O2 P2P2KKJJJJQ2Q2KKKKR2 R2KKS2S2JJT2T2HHG JJJJUUB2B2JJIIU2U2KK PPKK V2V2KKKK W2W2Q2Q2A2A2KKL2L2KK W2W2X2X2 V2V2HHQ2Q2NN HHV2V2Y2Z2QQ A3A3KKJJQ2Q2HHB3B3RC 3B2B2D3D3HHC3C3E3E3Q QKKUUKKD3D3JJD3D3KK D3D3D3D3D3D3D3D3D3D3 KKJJD3D3PPKKD3D3D3D3 D3D3D3D3 D3D3KKD3D3NNJJJJD3D3 KKKKD3D3D3D3F3F3 D3D3D3D3D3D3 D3D3JJG3G3KKD3D3D3D3 D3JJJJJJKKH3H3 D3D3JJJJF3F3F3D3D3 KKI3I3JJKKD3D3D3D3KK F3F3KKJJIID3D3G2G2F3 F3KKJ3J3K3K3KKKKD3D3 KKD3D3JJF3F3D3D3D3D3 F3F3 KKG2G2G3G3K3K3L3L3D3 D3D3D3D3D3G3AJJD3D3D 3D3JJD3D3 KKD3D3JJD3D3KKK D3D3KKJJD3D3M3M3D3D3 D3D3I3I3KK N3O3G2G2F3F3D3D3JJJJ KKI3I3F3F3JJP3P3F3F3 JJKKQ3Q3

AN EPISTLEA
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THE PREFACEB
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A Poem with so bold a title and a name prefixed from which the handling of so serious a subject would not be expected may reasonably oblige the author to say somewhat in defence both of himself and of his undertaking In the first place if it be objected to me that being a layman I ought not to have concerned myself with speculations which belong to the profession of divinity I could answer that perhaps laymen with equal advantages of parts and knowledge are not the most incompetent judges of sacred things but in the due sense of my own weakness and want of learning I plead not this I pretend not to make myself a judge of faith in others but only to make a confession of my own I lay no unhallowed hand upon the ark but wait on it with the reverence that becomes me at a distance In the next place I will ingenuously confess that the helps I have used in this small treatise were many of them taken from the works of our own reverend divines of the Church of England so that the weapons with which I combat irreligion are already consecrated though I suppose they may be taken down as lawfully as the sword of Goliah was by David when they are to be employed for the common cause against the enemies of piety I intend not by this to entitle them to any of my errors which yet I hope are only those of charity to mankind and such as my own charity has caused me to commit that of others may more easily excuse Being naturally inclined to scepticism in philosophy I have no reason to impose my opinions in a subject which is above it but whatever they are I submit them with all reverence to my mother church accounting them no farther mine than as they are authorised or at least uncondemned by her And indeed to secure myself on this side I have used the necessary precaution of showing this paper before it was published to a judicious and learned friend a man indefatigably zealous in the service of the church and state and whose writings have highly deserved of bothC
He was pleased to approve the body of the discourse and I hope he is more my friend than to do it out of complaisance it is true he had too good a taste to like it all and amongst some other faults recommended to my second view what I have written perhaps too boldly on St Athanasius which he advised me wholly to omit I am sensible enough that I had done more prudently to have followed his opinion but then I could not have satisfied myself that I had done honestly not to have written what was my own It has always been my thought that heathens who never did nor without miracle could hear of the name of Christ were yet in a possibility of salvation Neither will it enter easily into my belief that before the coming of our Saviour the whole world excepting only the Jewish nation should lie under the inevitable necessity of everlasting punishment for want of that revelation which was confined to so small a spot of ground as that of Palestine Among the sons of Noah we read of one only who was accursed and if a blessing in the ripeness of time was reserved for Japhet of whose progeny we are it seems unaccountable to me why so many generations of the same offspring as preceded our Saviour in the flesh should be all involved in one common condemnation and yet that their posterity should be entitled to the hopes of salvation as if a bill of exclusion had passed only on the fathers which debarred not the sons from their succession or that so many ages had been delivered over to hell and so many reserved for heaven and that the devil had the first choice and God the next Truly I am apt to think that the revealed religion which was taught by Noah to all his sons might continue for some ages in the whole posterity That afterwards it was included wholly in the family of Shem is manifest but when the progenies of Ham and Japhet swarmed into colonies and those colonies were subdivided into many others in process of time their descendants lost by little and little the primitive and purer rites of divine worship retaining only the notion of one Deity to which succeeding generations added others for men took their degrees in those ages from conquerors to gods Revelation being thus eclipsed to almost all mankind the light of nature as the next in dignity was substituted and that is it which St Paul concludes to be the rule of the heathens and by which they are hereafter to be judgedD
If my supposition be true then the consequence which I have assumed in my poem may be also true namely that Deism or the principles of natural worship are only the faint remnants or dying flames of revealed religion in the posterity of Noah and that our modern philosophers nay and some of our philosophising divines have too much exalted the faculties of our souls when they have maintained that by their force mankind has been able to find out that there is one supreme agent or intellectual Being which we call God that praise and prayer are his due worship and the rest of those deducements which I am confident are the remote effects of revelation and unattainable by our discourse I mean as simply considered and without the benefit of divine illumination So that we have not lifted up ourselves to God by the weak pinions of our reason but he has been pleased to descend to us and what Socrates said of him what Plato writ and the rest of the heathen philosophers of several nations is all no more than the twilight of revelation after the sun of it was set in the race of Noah That there is something above us some principle of motion our reason can apprehend though it cannot discover what it is by its own virtue And indeed it is very improbable that we who by the strength of our faculties cannot enter into the knowledge of any Being not so much as of our own should be able to find out by them that supreme nature which we cannot otherwise define than by saying it is infinite as if infinite were definable or infinity a subject for our narrow understanding They who would prove religion by reason do but weaken the cause which they endeavour to support it is to take away the pillars from our faith and to prop it only with a twig it is to design a tower like that of Babel which if it were possible as it is not to reach heaven would come to nothing by the confusion of the workmen For every man is building a several way impotently conceited of his own model and his own materials reason is always striving and always at a loss and of necessity it must so come to pass while it is exercised about that which is not its own proper object Let us be content at last to know God by his own methods at least so much of him as he is pleased to reveal to us in the sacred Scriptures to apprehend them to be the Word of God is all our reason has to do for all beyond it is the work of faith which is the seal of Heaven impressed upon our human understandingE
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And now for what concerns the holy bishop Athanasius the preface of whose creed seems inconsistent with my opinion which is that heathens may possibly be saved In the first place I desire it may be considered that it is the preface only not the creed itself which till I am better informed is of too hard a digestion for my charity It is not that I am ignorant how many several texts of Scripture seemingly support that cause but neither am I ignorant how all those texts may receive a kinder and more mollified interpretation Every man who is read in Church history knows that belief was drawn up after a long contestation with Arius concerning the divinity of our blessed Saviour and his being one substance with the Father and that thus compiled it was sent abroad among the Christian Churches as a kind of test which whosoever took was looked upon as an orthodox believer It is manifest from hence that the heathen part of the empire was not concerned in it for its business was not to distinguish betwixt Pagans and Christians but betwixt Heretics and true Believers This well considered takes off the heavy weight of censure which I would willingly avoid from so venerable a man for if this proportion whosoever will be saved be restrained only to those to whom it was intended and for whom it was composed I mean the Christians then the anathema reaches not the heathens who had never heard of Christ and were nothing interested in that disputeF
After all I am far from blaming even that prefatory addition to the creed and as far from cavilling at the continuation of it in the Liturgy of the Church where on the days appointed it is publicly read for I suppose there is the same reason for it now in opposition to the Socinians as there was then against the Arians the one being a heresy which seems to have been refined out of the other and with how much more plausibility of reason it combats our religion with so much more caution it ought to be avoided therefore the prudence of our Church is to be commended which has interposed her authority for the recommendation of this creed Yet to such as are grounded in the true belief those explanatory creeds the Nicene and this of Athanasius might perhaps be spared for what is supernatural will always be a mystery in spite of exposition and for my own part the plain Apostles' creed is most suitable to my weak understanding as the simplest diet is the most easy of digestionG
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I have dwelt longer on this subject than I intended and longer than perhaps I ought for having laid down as my foundation that the Scripture is a rule that in all things needful to salvation it is clear sufficient and ordained by God Almighty for that purpose I have left myself no right to interpret obscure places such as concern the possibility of eternal happiness to heathens because whatsoever is obscure is concluded not necessary to be knownH
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But by asserting the Scripture to be the canon of oar faith I have unavoidably created to myself two sorts of enemies the Papists indeed more directly because they have kept the Scriptures from us what they could and have reserved to themselves a right of interpreting what they have delivered under the pretence of infallibility and the Fanatics more collaterally because they have assumed what amounts to an infallibility in the private spirit and have detorted those texts of Scripture which are not necessary to salvation to the damnable uses of sedition disturbance and destruction of the civil government To begin with the Papists and to speak freely I think them the less dangerous at least in appearance to our present state for not only the penal laws are in force against them and their number is contemptible but also their peers and commons are excluded from parliament and consequently those laws in no probability of being repealed A general and uninterrupted plot of their clergy ever since the Reformation I suppose all Protestants believe for it is not reasonable to think but that so many of their orders as were outed from their fat possessions would endeavour a re entrance against those whom they account hereticsB
As for the late design Mr Coleman's letters for aught I know are the best evidence and what they discover without wiredrawing their sense or malicious glosses all men of reason conclude credible If there be anything more than this required of me I must believe it as well as I am able in spite of the witnesses and out of a decent conformity to the votes of parliament for I suppose the Fanatics will not allow the private spirit in this case Here the infallibility is at least in one part of the government and our understandings as well as our wills are represented But to return to the Roman Catholics how can we be secure from the practice of Jesuited Papists in that religion For not two or three of that order as some of them would impose upon us but almost the whole body of them are of opinion that their infallible master has a right over kings not only in spirituals but temporals Not to name Mariana Bellarmine Emanuel Sa Molina Santare Simancha and at least twenty others of foreign countries we can produce of our own nation Campian and Doleman or Parsons besides many are named whom I have not read who all of them attest this doctrine that the pope can depose and give away the right of any sovereign prince si vel paulum deflexerit if he shall never so little warp but if he once comes to be excommunicated then the bond of obedience is taken off from subjects and they may and ought to drive him like another Nebuchadnezzar ex hominum Christianorum dominatu from exercising dominion over Christians and to this they are bound by virtue of divine precept and by all the ties of conscience under no less penalty than damnationG
If they answer me as a learned priest has lately written that this doctrine of the Jesuits is not de fide and that consequently they are not obliged by it they must pardon me if I think they have said nothing to the purpose for it is a maxim in their church where points of faith are not decided and that doctors are of contrary opinions they may follow which part they please but more safely the most received and most authorised And their champion Bellarmine has told the world in his Apology that the king of England is a vassal to the pope ratione directi domini and that he holds in villanage of his Roman landlord which is no new claim put in for England Our chronicles are his authentic witnesses that King John was deposed by the same plea and Philip Augustus admitted tenant And which makes the more for Bellarmine the French king was again ejected when our king submitted to the church and the crown was received under the sordid condition of a vassalageI
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It is not sufficient for the more moderate and well meaning Papists of which I doubt not there are many to produce the evidences of their loyalty to the late king and to declare their innocency in this plot I will grant their behaviour in the first to have been as loyal and as brave as they desire and will be willing to hold them excused as to the second I mean when it comes to my turn and after my betters for it is a madness to be sober alone while the nation continues drank but that saying of their father Cres is still running in my head that they may be dispensed with in their obedience to an heretic prince while the necessity of the times shall oblige them to it for that as another of them tells us is only the effect of Christian prudence but when once they shall get power to shake him off an heretic is no lawful king and consequently to rise against him is no rebellion I should be glad therefore that they would follow the advice which was charitably given them by a reverend prelate of our church namely that they would join in a public act of disowning and detesting those Jesuitic principles and subscribe to all doctrines which deny the pope's authority of deposing kings and releasing subjects from their oath of allegiance to which I should think they might easily be induced if it be true that this present pope has condemned the doctrine of king killing a thesis of the Jesuits maintained amongst others ex cathedra as they call it or in open consistoryJ
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Leaving them therefore in so fair a way if they please themselves of satisfying all reasonable men of their sincerity and good meaning to the government I shall make bold to consider that other extreme of our religion I mean the Fanatics or Schismatics of the English Church Since the Bible has been translated into our tongue they have used it so as if their business was not to be saved but to be damned by its contents If we consider only them better had it been for the English nation that it had still remained in the original Greek and Hebrew or at least in the honest Latin of St Jerome than that several texts in it should have been prevaricated to the destruction of that government which put it into so ungrateful handsB
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How many heresies the first translation of Tindal produced in few years let my Lord Herbert's history of Henry VIII inform you insomuch that for the gross errors in it and the great mischiefs it occasioned a sentence passed on the first edition of the Bible too shameful almost to be repeated After the short reign of Edward VI who had continued to carry on the Reformation on other principles than it was begun every one knows that not only the chief promoters of that work but many others whose consciences would not dispense with Popery were forced for fear of persecution to change climates from whence returning at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign many of them who had been in France and at Geneva brought back the rigid opinions and imperious discipline of Calvin to graft upon our Reformation which though they cunningly concealed at first as well knowing how nauseously that drug would go down in a lawful monarchy which was prescribed for a rebellious commonwealth yet they always kept it in reserve and were never wanting to themselves either in court or parliament when either they had any prospect of a numerous party of fanatic members of the one or the encouragement of any favourite in the other whose covetousness was gaping at the patrimony of the Church They who will consult the works of our venerable Hooker or the account of his life or more particularly the letter written to him on this subject by George Cranmer may see by what gradations they proceeded from the dislike of cap and surplice the very next step was admonitions to the parliament against the whole government ecclesiastical then came out volumes in English and Latin in defence of their tenets and immediately practices were set on foot to erect their discipline without authorityK
Those not succeeding satire and railing was the next and Martin Mar prelate the Marvel of those times was the first Presbyterian scribbler who sanctified libels and scurrility to the use of the good old cause which was done says my author upon this account that their serious treatises having been fully answered and refuted they might compass by railing what they had lost by reasoning and when their cause was sunk in court and parliament they might at least hedge in a stake amongst the rabble for to their ignorance all things are wit which are abusive but if Church and State were made the theme then the doctoral degree of wit was to be taken at Billingsgate even the most saint like of the party though they durst not excuse this contempt and vilifying of the government yet were pleased and grinned at it with a pious smile and called it a judgment of God against the hierarchy Thus sectaries we may see were born with teeth foul mouthed and scurrilous from their infancy and if spiritual pride venom violence contempt of superiors and slander had been the marks of orthodox belief the presbytery and the rest of our schismatics which are their spawn were always the most visible church in the Christian worldL
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It is true the government was too strong at that time for a rebellion but to show what proficiency they had made in Calvin's school even then their mouths watered at it for two of their gifted brotherhood Hacket and Coppinger as the story tells us got up into a pease cart and harangue the people to dispose them to an insurrection and to establish their discipline by force so that however it comes about that now they celebrate Queen Elizabeth's birth night as that of their saint and patroness yet then they were for doing the work of the Lord by arms against her and in all probability they wanted but a fanatic lord mayor and two sheriffs of their party to have compassed itM
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Our venerable Hooker after many admonitions which he had given them towards the end of his preface breaks out into this prophetic speech There is in every one of these considerations most just cause to fear lest our hastiness to embrace a thing of so perilous consequence meaning the Presbyterian discipline should cause posterity to feel those evils which as yet are more easy for us to prevent than they would be for them to remedyK
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How fatally this Cassandra has foretold we know too well by sad experience the seeds were sown in the time of Queen Elizabeth the bloody harvest ripened in the reign of King Charles the Martyr and because all the sheaves could not be carried off without shedding some of the loose grains another crop is too like to follow nay I fear it is unavoidable if the conventiclers be permitted still to scatterJ
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A man may be suffered to quote an adversary to our religion when he speaks truth and it is the observation of Maimbourg in his History of Calvinism that wherever that discipline was planted and embraced rebellion civil war and misery attended it And how indeed should it happen otherwise Reformation of Church and State has always been the ground of our divisions in England While we were Papists our holy father rid us by pretending authority out of the Scriptures to depose princes when we shook off his authority the sectaries furnished themselves with the same weapons and out of the same magazine the Bible so that the Scriptures which are in themselves the greatest security of governors as commanding express obedience to them are now turned to their destruction and never since the Reformation has there wanted a text of their interpreting to authorise a rebel And it is to be noted by the way that the doctrines of king killing and deposing which have been taken up only by the worst party of the Papists the most frontless flatterers of the pope's authority have been espoused defended and are still maintained by the whole body of nonconformists and republicans It is but dubbing themselves the people of God which it is the interest of their preachers to tell them they are and their own interest to believe and after that they cannot dip into the Bible but one text or another will turn up for their purpose if they are under persecution as they call it then that is a mark of their election if they flourish then God works miracles for their deliverance and the saints are to possess the earthN
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They may think themselves to be too roughly handled in this paper but I who know best how far I could have gone on this subject must be bold to tell them they are spared though at the same time I am not ignorant that they interpret the mildness of a writer to them as they do the mercy of the government in the one they think it fear and conclude it weakness in the other The best way for them to confute me is as I before advised the Papists to disclaim their principles and renounce their practices We shall all be glad to think them true Englishmen when they obey the king and true Protestants when they conform to the church disciplineG
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It remains that I acquaint the reader that these verses were written for an ingenious young gentleman my friend upon his translation of The Critical History of the Old Testament composed by the learned Father Simon the verses therefore are addressed to the translator of that work and the style of them is what it ought to be epistolaryK
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If any one be so lamentable a critic as to require the smoothness the numbers and the turn of heroic poetry in this poem I must tell him that if he has not read Horace I have studied him and hope the style of his epistles is not ill imitated here The expressions of a poem designed purely for instruction ought to be plain and natural and yet majestic for here the poet is presumed to be a kind of lawgiver and those three qualities which I have named are proper to the legislative style The florid elevated and figurative way is for the passions for love and hatred fear and anger are begotten in the soul by showing their objects out of their true proportion either greater than the life or less but instruction is to be given by showing them what they naturally are A man is to be cheated into passion but to be reasoned into truthO
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Dim as the borrow'd beams of moon and starsB
To lonely weary wandering travellersB
Is reason to the soul and as on highP
Those rolling fires discover but the skyP
Not light us here so reason's glimmering rayJ
Was lent not to assure our doubtful wayJ
But guide us upward to a better dayJ
And as those nightly tapers disappearJ
When day's bright lord ascends our hemisphereJ
So pale grows reason at religion's sightQ
So dies and so dissolves in supernatural lightQ
Some few whose lamp shone brighter have been ledR
From cause to cause to nature's secret headR
And found that one first principle must beK
But what or who that UNIVERSAL HEK
Whether some soul encompassing this ballS
Unmade unmoved yet making moving allS
Or various atoms' interfering danceB
Leap'd into form the noble work of chanceB
Or this Great All was from eternityK
Not even the Stagyrite himself could seeK
And Epicurus guess'd as well as heK
As blindly groped they for a future stateT
As rashly judged of providence and fateT
But least of all could their endeavours findU
What most concern'd the good of human kindU
For happiness was never to be foundV
But vanish'd from them like enchanted groundV
One thought Content the good to be enjoy'dW
This every little accident destroy'dW
The wiser madmen did for Virtue toilX
A thorny or at best a barren soilX
In Pleasure some their glutton souls would steepY
But found their line too short the well too deepY
And leaky vessels which no bliss could keepY
Thus anxious thoughts in endless circles rollZ
Without a centre where to fix the soulZ
In this wild maze their vain endeavours endA2
How can the less the greater comprehendA2
Or finite reason reach InfinityK
For what could fathom God were more than HeK
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The Deist thinks he stands on firmer groundV
Cries Greek eureka the mighty secret's foundV
God is that spring of good supreme and bestB2
We made to serve and in that service blestB2
If so some rules of worship must be givenG
Distributed alike to all by HeavenG
Else God were partial and to some deniedC2
The means his justice should for all provideC2
This general worship is to praise and prayJ
One part to borrow blessings one to payJ
And when frail nature slides into offenceK
The sacrifice for crimes is penitenceK
Yet since the effects of Providence we findU
Are variously dispensed to human kindU
That vice triumphs and virtue suffers hereJ
A brand that sovereign justice cannot bearJ
Our reason prompts us to a future stateT
The last appeal from fortune and from fateT
Where God's all righteous ways will be declaredD2
The bad meet punishment the good rewardE2
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Thus man by his own strength to heaven would soarJ
And would not be obliged to God for moreJ
Vain wretched creature how art thou misledR
To think thy wit these God like notions bredR
These truths are not the product of thy mindU
But dropp'd from heaven and of a nobler kindU
Reveal'd religion first inform'd thy sightQ
And reason saw not till faith sprung the lightQ
Hence all thy natural worship takes the sourceK
'Tis revelation what thou think'st discourseK
Else how com'st thou to see these truths so clearJ
Which so obscure to heathens did appearJ
Not Plato these nor Aristotle foundV
Nor he whose wisdom oracles renown'dV
Hast thou a wit so deep or so sublimeF2
Or canst thou lower dive or higher climbF2
Canst thou by reason more of Godhead knowG2
Than Plutarch Seneca or CiceroG2
Those giant wits in happier ages bornH2
When arms and arts did Greece and Rome adornH2
Knew no such system no such piles could raiseK
Of natural worship built on prayer and praiseK
To one sole GodI2
Nor did remorse to expiate sin prescribeJ2
But slew their fellow creatures for a bribeJ2
The guiltless victim groan'd for their offenceK
And cruelty and blood was penitenceK
If sheep and oxen could atone for menK2
Ah at how cheap a rate the rich might sinL2
And great oppressors might Heaven's wrath beguileM2
By offering His own creatures for a spoilX
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Darest thou poor worm offend InfinityK
And must the terms of peace be given by theeK
Then thou art Justice in the last appealN2
Thy easy God instructs thee to rebelA
And like a king remote and weak must takeO2
What satisfaction thou art pleased to makeO2
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But if there be a Power too just and strongP2
To wink at crimes and bear unpunish'd wrongP2
Look humbly upward see His will discloseK
The forfeit first and then the fine imposeK
A mulct thy poverty could never payJ
Had not Eternal Wisdom found the wayJ
And with celestial wealth supplied thy storeJ
His justice makes the fine His mercy quits the scoreJ
See God descending in thy human frameQ2
The Offended suffering in the offender's nameQ2
All thy misdeeds to Him imputed seeK
And all His righteousness devolved on theeK
For granting we have sinn'd and that the offenceK
Of man is made against OmnipotenceK
Some price that bears proportion must be paidR2
And infinite with infinite be weigh'dR2
See then the Deist lost remorse for viceK
Not paid or paid inadequate in priceK
What further means can reason now directS2
Or what relief from human wit expectS2
That shows us sick and sadly are we sureJ
Still to be sick till Heaven reveal the cureJ
If then Heaven's will must needs be understoodT2
Which must if we want cure and Heaven be goodT2
Let all records of will reveal'd be shownH
With Scripure all in equal balance thrownH
And our one Sacred Book will be that oneG
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Proof needs not here for whether we compareJ
That impious idle superstitious wareJ
Of rites lustrations offerings which beforeJ
In various ages various countries boreJ
With Christian faith and virtues we shall findU
None answering the great ends of human kindU
But this one rule of life that shows us bestB2
How God may be appeased and mortals blestB2
Whether from length of time its worth we drawJ
The word is scarce more ancient than the lawJ
Heaven's early care prescribed for every ageI
First in the soul and after in the pageI
Or whether more abstractedly we lookU2
Or on the writers or the written bookU2
Whence but from Heaven could men unskill'd in artsK
In several ages born in several partsK
Weave such agreeing truths or how or whyP
Should all conspire to cheat us with a lieP
Unask'd their pains ungrateful their adviceK
Starving their gain and martyrdom their priceK
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If on the Book itself we cast our viewV2
Concurrent heathens prove the story trueV2
The doctrine miracles which must convinceK
For Heaven in them appeals to human senseK
And though they prove not they confirm the causeK
When what is taught agrees with Nature's lawsK
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Then for the style majestic and divineW2
It speaks no less than God in every lineW2
Commanding words whose force is still the sameQ2
As the first fiat that produced our frameQ2
All faiths beside or did by arms ascendA2
Or sense indulged has made mankind their friendA2
This only doctrine does our lusts opposeK
Unfed by Nature's soil in which it growsK
Cross to our interests curbing sense and sinL2
Oppress'd without and undermined withinL2
It thrives through pain its own tormentors tiresK
And with a stubborn patience still aspiresK
To what can reason such effects assignW2
Transcending nature but to laws divineW2
Which in that sacred volume are contain'dX2
Sufficient clear and for that use ordain'dX2
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But stay the Deist here will urge anewV2
No supernatural worship can be trueV2
Because a general law is that aloneH
Which must to all and every where be knownH
A style so large as not this Book can claimQ2
Nor aught that bears Reveal'd Religion's nameQ2
'Tis said the sound of a Messiah's birthN
Is gone through all the habitable earthN
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But still that text must be confined aloneH
To what was then inhabited and knownH
And what provision could from thence accrueV2
To Indian souls and worlds discover'd newV2
In other parts it helps that ages pastY2
The Scriptures there were known and were embracedZ2
Till sin spread once again the shades of nightQ
What's that to these who never saw the lightQ
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Of all objections this indeed is chiefA3
To startle reason stagger frail beliefA3
We grant 'tis true that Heaven from human senseK
Has hid the secret paths of ProvidenceK
But boundless wisdom boundless mercy mayJ
Find even for those bewilder'd souls a wayJ
If from His nature foes may pity claimQ2
Much more may strangers who ne'er heard His nameQ2
And though no name be for salvation knownH
But that of his Eternal Son aloneH
Who knows how far transcending goodness canB3
Extend the merits of that Son to manB3
Who knows what reasons may His mercy leadR
Or ignorance invincible may pleadC3
Not only charity bids hope the bestB2
But more the great apostle has express'dB2
That if the Gentiles whom no law inspiredD3
By nature did what was by law requiredD3
They who the written rule had never knownH
Were to themselves both rule and law aloneH
To nature's plain indictment they shall pleadC3
And by their conscience be condemn'd or freedC3
Most righteous doom because a rule reveal'dE3
Is none to those from whom it was conceal'dE3
Then those who follow'd reason's dictates rightQ
Lived up and lifted high their natural lightQ
With Socrates may see their Maker's faceK
While thousand rubric martyrs want a placeK
Nor does it balk my charity to findU
The Egyptian bishop of another mindU
For though his creed eternal truth containsK
'Tis hard for man to doom to endless painsK
All who believed not all his zeal requiredD3
Unless he first could prove he was inspiredD3
Then let us either think he meant to sayJ
This faith where publish'd was the only wayJ
Or else conclude that Arius to confuteD3
The good old man too eager in disputeD3
Flew high and as his Christian fury roseK
Damn'd all for heretics who durst opposeK
-
Thus far my charity this path has triedD3
A much unskilful but well meaning guideD3
Yet what they are even these crude thoughts were bredD3
By reading that which better thou hast readD3
Thy matchless author's work which thou my friendD3
By well translating better dost commendD3
Those youthful hours which of thy equals mostD3
In toys have squander'd or in vice have lostD3
Those hours hast thou to nobler use employ'dD3
And the severe delights of truth enjoy'dD3
Witness this weighty book in which appearsK
The crabbed toil of many thoughtful yearsK
Spent by thy author in the sifting careJ
Of Rabbins' old sophisticated wareJ
From gold divine which he who well can sortD3
May afterwards make algebra a sportD3
A treasure which if country curates buyP
They Junius and Tremellius may defyP
Save pains in various readings and translationsK
And without Hebrew make most learn'd quotationsK
A work so full with various learning fraughtD3
So nicely ponder'd yet so strongly wroughtD3
As nature's height and art's last hand requiredD3
As much as man could compass uninspiredD3
Where we may see what errors have been madeD3
Both in the copiers' and translators' tradeD3
How Jewish Popish interests have prevail'dD3
And where infallibility has fail'dD3
-
For some who have his secret meaning guess'dD3
Have found our author not too much a priestD3
For fashion sake he seems to have recourseK
To Pope and Councils and Tradition's forceK
But he that old traditions could subdueD3
Could not but find the weakness of the newD3
If Scripture though derived from heavenly birthN
Has been but carelessly preserved on earthN
If God's own people who of God beforeJ
Knew what we know and had been promised moreJ
In fuller terms of Heaven's assisting careJ
And who did neither time nor study spareJ
To keep this Book untainted unperplex'dD3
Let in gross errors to corrupt the textD3
Omitted paragraphs embroil'd the senseK
With vain traditions stopp'd the gaping fenceK
Which every common hand pull'd up with easeK
What safety from such brushwood helps as theseK
If written words from time are not securedD3
How can we think have oral sounds enduredD3
Which thus transmitted if one mouth has fail'dD3
Immortal lies on ages are entail'dD3
And that some such have been is proved too plainF3
If we consider interest church and gainF3
-
O but says one tradition set asideD3
Where can we hope for an unerring guideD3
For since the original Scripture has been lostD3
All copies disagreeing maim'd the mostD3
Or Christian faith can have no certain groundD3
Or truth in Church Tradition must be foundD3
-
Such an omniscient Church we wish indeedD3
'Twere worth both Testaments cast in the CreedD3
But if this mother be a guide so sureJ
As can all doubts resolve all truth secureJ
Then her infallibility as wellG3
Where copies are corrupt or lame can tellG3
Restore lost canon with as little painsK
As truly explicate what still remainsK
Which yet no Council dare pretend to doD3
Unless like Esdras they could write it newD3
Strange confidence still to interpret trueD3
Yet not be sure that all they have explain'dD3
Is in the blest original contain'dD3
More safe and much more modest 'tis to sayJ
God would not leave mankind without a wayJ
And that the Scriptures though not every whereJ
Free from corruption or entire or clearJ
Are uncorrupt sufficient clear entireJ
In all things which our needful faith requireJ
If others in the same glass better seeK
'Tis for themselves they look but not for meK
For my salvation must its doom receiveH3
Not from what others but what I believeH3
-
Must all tradition then be set asideD3
This to affirm were ignorance or prideD3
Are there not many points some needful sureJ
To saving faith that Scripture leaves obscureJ
Which every sect will wrest a several wayJ
For what one sect interprets all sects mayJ
We hold and say we prove from Scripture plainF3
That Christ is God the bold SocinianF3
From the same Scripture urges he's but manF3
Now what appeal can end the important suitD3
Both parts talk loudly but the rule is muteD3
-
Shall I speak plain and in a nation freeK
Assume an honest layman's libertyK
I think according to my little skillI3
To my own Mother Church submitting stillI3
That many have been saved and many mayJ
Who never heard this question brought in playJ
Th' unletter'd Christian who believes in grossK
Plods on to heaven and ne'er is at a lossK
For the strait gate would be made straiter yetD3
Were none admitted there but men of witD3
The few by nature form'd with learning fraughtD3
Born to instruct as others to be taughtD3
Must study well the sacred page and seeK
Which doctrine this or that does best agreeK
With the whole tenor of the work divineF3
And plainliest points to Heaven's reveal'd designF3
Which exposition flows from genuine senseK
And which is forced by wit and eloquenceK
Not that tradition's parts are useless hereJ
When general old disinteress'd and clearJ
That ancient Fathers thus expound the pageI
Gives Truth the reverend majesty of ageI
Confirms its force by biding every testD3
For best authority's next rules are bestD3
And still the nearer to the spring we goG2
More limpid more unsoil'd the waters flowG2
Thus first traditions were a proof aloneF3
Could we be certain such they were so knownF3
But since some flaws in long descent may beK
They make not truth but probabilityK
Even Arius and Pelagius durst provokeJ3
To what the centuries preceding spokeJ3
Such difference is there in an oft told taleK3
But Truth by its own sinews will prevailK3
Tradition written therefore more commendsK
Authority than what from voice descendsK
And this as perfect as its kind can beK
Rolls down to us the sacred historyK
Which from the Universal Church receivedD3
Is tried and after for itself believedD3
-
The partial Papists would infer from henceK
Their Church in last resort should judge the senseK
But first they would assume with wondrous artD3
Themselves to be the whole who are but partD3
Of that vast frame the Church yet grant they wereJ
The handers down can they from thence inferJ
A right to interpret or would they aloneF3
Who brought the present claim it for their ownF3
The Book's a common largess to mankindD3
Not more for them than every man design'dD3
The welcome news is in the letter foundD3
The carrier's not commissioned to expoundD3
It speaks itself and what it does containF3
In all things needful to be known is plainF3
-
In times o'ergrown with rust and ignoranceK
A gainful trade their clergy did advanceK
When want of learning kept the laymen lowG2
And none but priests were authorised to knowG2
When what small knowledge was in them did dwellG3
And he a god who could but read and spellG3
Then Mother Church did mightily prevailK3
She parcell'd out the Bible by retailK3
But still expounded what she sold or gaveL3
To keep it in her power to damn and saveL3
Scripture was scarce and as the market wentD3
Poor laymen took salvation on contentD3
As needy men take money good or badD3
God's Word they had not but th' priest's they hadD3
Yet whate'er false conveyances they madeD3
The lawyer still was certain to be paidD3
In those dark times they learn'd their knack so wellG3
That by long use they grew infallibleA
At last a knowing age began to inquireJ
If they the Book or that did them inspireJ
And making narrower search they found though lateD3
That what they thought the priest's was their estateD3
Taught by the will produced the written WordD3
How long they had been cheated on recordD3
Then every man who saw the title fairJ
Claim'd a child's part and put in for a shareJ
Consulted soberly his private goodD3
And saved himself as cheap as e'er he couldD3
-
'Tis true my friend and far be flattery henceK
This good had full as bad a consequenceK
The Book thus put in every vulgar handD3
Which each presumed he best could understandD3
The common rule was made the common preyJ
And at the mercy of the rabble layJ
The tender page with horny fists was gall'dD3
And he was gifted most that loudest bawl'dD3
The spirit gave the doctoral degreeK
And every member of a companyK
Was of his trade and of the Bible freeK
-
Plain truths enough for needful use they foundD3
But men would still be itching to expoundD3
Each was ambitious of the obscurest placeK
No measure ta'en from knowledge all from graceK
Study and pains were now no more their careJ
Texts were explain'd by fasting and by prayerJ
This was the fruit the private spirit broughtD3
Occasion'd by great zeal and little thoughtD3
While crowds unlearn'd with rude devotion warmM3
About the sacred viands buzz and swarmM3
The fly blown text creates a crawling broodD3
And turns to maggots what was meant for foodD3
A thousand daily sects rise up and dieD3
A thousand more the perish'd race supplyD3
So all we make of Heaven's discover'd willI3
Is not to have it or to use it illI3
The danger's much the same on several shelvesK
If others wreck us or we wreck ourselvesK
-
What then remains but waiving each extremeN3
The tides of ignorance and pride to stemO3
Neither so rich a treasure to foregoG2
Nor proudly seek beyond our power to knowG2
Faith is not built on disquisitions vainF3
The things we must believe are few and plainF3
But since men will believe more than they needD3
And every man will make himself a creedD3
In doubtful questions 'tis the safest wayJ
To learn what unsuspected ancients sayJ
For 'tis not likely we should higher soarJ
In search of heaven than all the Church beforeJ
Nor can we be deceived unless we seeK
The Scripture and the Fathers disagreeK
If after all they stand suspected stillI3
For no man's faith depends upon his willI3
'Tis some relief that points not clearly knownF3
Without much hazard may be let aloneF3
And after hearing what our Church can sayJ
If still our reason runs another wayJ
That private reason 'tis more just to curbP3
Than by disputes the public peace disturbP3
For points obscure are of small use to learnF3
But common quiet is mankind's concernF3
-
Thus have I made my own opinions clearJ
Yet neither praise expect nor censure fearJ
And this unpolish'd rugged verse I choseK
As fittest for discourse and nearest proseK
For while from sacred truth I do not swerveQ3
Tom Sternhold's or Tom Shadwell's rhymes will serveQ3

John Dryden



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