OF man's obedience, while in Eden blest, What a mere trifle is here made the test! An outward action, in itself, defin'd To be of @3perfectly indiff'rent@1 kind; Which, but for God's forbidding threat severe, It had been @3superstition@1 to forbear. A strange account; that neither does, nor can, Make any part of true religion's plan; But must expose it to the ridicule Of scoffers, judging by this crooked rule: Its friends, defending truth, as they suppose, Lay themselves open to acuter foes. To say that @3action, neither good nor bad, From which no harm in nature could be had, Was chang'd, (by positive, commanding will, Or threat forbidding,) to a deadly ill@1, Charges, by consequence the most direct, On God himself that ill and its effect. Language had surely come to a poor pass, Before an author, of distinguish'd class For shining talents, could endure to make, In such a matter, such a gross mistake; Could thus derive death's origin and root, @3From Adam's eating of a harmless fruit.@1 "From Adam's eating?"@3Did not God forbid The taste of it to Adam?@1Yes He did @3And was it harmless, must we understand, To disobey God's positive commands?@1 No, by no means; but then the @3harm@1, we see, Came not from God's @3command@1, but from the @3tree.@1 If He command, the action must be good; If He forbid, some ill is understood: The tree, the fruit, had dreadful ills conceal'd, Not @3made@1 by his forbidding, but @3reveal'd@1; That our first parents, by a true belief, Might know enough to shun the fatal grief. The dire experience of a world of woe, Forbidding Mercy will'd them not to know; Told them what ill was in the @3false desire@1, Which their free wills were tempted to admire; That, of such fruit, the eating was@3To die@1 Its @3harmless@1 nature was the @3tempter's@1 lie. To urge it @3now@1, and to impute the harm Of death, and evil, to the kind alarm Of God's command, so justly understood To will his creatures nothing else but good, Is, for a @3Babel fiction@1, to resign RIGHT REASON, SCRIPTURE, and the LOVE DIVINE. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MOTTO TO THE SONGS OF INNOCENCE & OF EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE MY LAST DUCHESS; FERRRA by ROBERT BROWNING THE WASTE PLACES by JAMES STEPHENS AFTER LONG SILENCE by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS MY BATH by JOHN STUART BLACKIE MY NANNIE'S AWA (1) by ROBERT BURNS |