The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

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The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters - John  Keats

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God

       At war with all the frailty of grief,

       Of rage, of fear, anxiety, revenge,

       Remorse, spleen, hope, but most of all despair.

       Against these plagues he strove in vain; for Fate

       Had pour’d a mortal oil upon his head,

       A disanointing poison: so that Thea,

       Affrighted, kept her still, and let him pass

       First onwards in, among the fallen tribe. 0

      As with us mortal men, the laden heart

       Is persecuted more, and fever’d more,

       When it is nighing to the mournful house

       Where other hearts are sick of the same bruise;

       So Saturn, as he walk’d into the midst,

       Felt faint, and would have sunk among the rest,

       But that he met Enceladus’s eye,

       Whose mightiness, and awe of him, at once

       Came like an inspiration; and he shouted,

       “Titans, behold your God!” at which some groan’d; Some started on their feet; some also shouted;

       Some wept, some wail’d, all bow’d with reverence;

       And Ops, uplifting her black folded veil,

       Show’d her pale cheeks, and all her forehead wan,

       Her eyebrows thin and jet, and hollow eyes.

       There is a roaring in the bleak-grown pines

       When Winter lifts his voice; there is a noise

       Among immortals when a God gives sign,

       With hushing finger, how he means to load

       His tongue with the full weight of utterless thought, With thunder, and with music, and with pomp:

       Such noise is like the roar of bleak-grown pines;

       Which, when it ceases in this mountain’d world,

       No other sound succeeds; but ceasing here,

       Among these fallen, Saturn’s voice therefrom

       Grew up like organ, that begins anew

       Its strain, when other harmonies, stopt short,

       Leave the dinn’d air vibrating silverly.

       Thus grew it up— “Not in my own sad breast,

       Which is its own great judge and searcher out, Can I find reason why ye should be thus:

       Not in the legends of the first of days,

       Studied from that old spirit-leaved book

       Which starry Uranus with finger bright

       Sav’d from the shores of darkness, when the waves

       Low-ebb’d still hid it up in shallow gloom; —

       And the which book ye know I ever kept

       For my firm-based footstool: — Ah, infirm!

       Not there, nor in sign, symbol, or portent

       Of element, earth, water, air, and fire, — At war, at peace, or inter-quarreling

       One against one, or two, or three, or all

       Each several one against the other three,

       As fire with air loud warring when rain-floods

       Drown both, and press them both against earth’s face,

       Where, finding sulphur, a quadruple wrath

       Unhinges the poor world; — not in that strife,

       Wherefrom I take strange lore, and read it deep,

       Can I find reason why ye should be thus:

       No, nowhere can unriddle, though I search, And pore on Nature’s universal scroll

       Even to swooning, why ye, Divinities,

       The first-born of all shap’d and palpable Gods,

       Should cower beneath what, in comparison,

       Is untremendous might. Yet ye are here,

       O’erwhelm’d, and spurn’d, and batter’d, ye are here!

       O Titans, shall I say ‘Arise!’ — Ye groan:

       Shall I say ‘Crouch!’ — Ye groan. What can I then?

       O Heaven wide! O unseen parent dear!

       What can I? Tell me, all ye brethren Gods, How we can war, how engine our great wrath!

       O speak your counsel now, for Saturn’s ear

       Is all a-hunger’d. Thou, Oceanus,

       Ponderest high and deep; and in thy face

       I see, astonied, that severe content

       Which comes of thought and musing: give us help!”

      So ended Saturn; and the God of the Sea,

       Sophist and sage, from no Athenian grove,

       But cogitation in his watery shades,

       Arose, with locks not oozy, and began, In murmurs, which his first-endeavouring tongue

       Caught infant-like from the far-foamed sands.

       “O ye, whom wrath consumes! who, passion-stung,

       Writhe at defeat, and nurse your agonies!

       Shut up your senses, stifle up your ears,

       My voice is not a bellows unto ire.

       Yet listen, ye who will, whilst I bring proof

       How ye, perforce, must be content to stoop:

       And in the proof much comfort will I give,

       If ye will take that comfort in its truth. We fall by course of Nature’s law, not force

       Of thunder, or of Jove. Great Saturn, thou

       Hast sifted well the atom-universe;

       But for this reason, that thou art the King,

       And only blind from sheer supremacy,

       One avenue was shaded from thine eyes,

      

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