- HAND omnipotent, in endless space,
- From chaos, formed a world and found a place,
- Where, through the countless ages, yet unborn,
- A star might shine from dusk to rosy morn.
- Great mountains rose, majestic in their might,
- And sun-kissed hills, aglow with mellow light,
- And rippling streams went purling through the dales,
- To silver lakes that glistened in the vales.
- A subtle fragrance filled each shifting breeze,
- The scent of flowers in bloom and budding trees.
- So beautiful the earth, in Nature's eyes,
- A soul was sent to dwell, in human guise,
- A form of god-like beauty and of might.
- To drink the sunshine and to dream at night,
- In those old days, when first the world began,
- Strange visions came to Nature's first child, Man.
- Unclad and lone, he roved from spot to spot
- And longed and yearned for something which was not.
- Until, at last, a prayer went up to Heaven
- And Nature's noblest gift to man was given:
- A gentle, throbbing, trembling, beauteous maid,
- Fair as the man, but with a softer shade,
- Endowed with beauty and a thousand charms
- That sought the sheltering clasp of loving arms.
- As children play, in childhood's happy hours,
- They romped and played among the sylvan bowers,
- Or sported in the streams whose waters sweet
- Ran cool beneath the trees at Noonday's heat.
- And when night's sable banners were unfurled
- And darkness wound her arms about the world,
- On beds of roses, in some vine-clad nest,
- Their drowsy senses found untroubled rest
- And wandering zephyrs swetp across them there,
- Unclad, but anashamed, in Eden fair.
- No thought had come to them of wild desire
- And yet, at times, a smouldering, hidden fire
- Seemed slumbering deep within and fiercer burned.
- When, in their sleep, they toward each other turned,
- One ambient night of blissful summer-time,
- A perfect night of Eden's balmy clime,
- Eve stretched her languorous limbs in restless sleep
- And Adam, at her side, sought slumber deep.
- Some trifling thing, perhaps a wind-swayed fern,
- A leaf--a bird--caused both of them to turn.
- Eve's rounded arm was thrown above her head,
- Her dimpled knee, just lifted from its bed,
- When, by this chance, this trifle, light as air,
- Their warm lips met, and, trembling, lingered there.
- They slept no more from dusk to rosy dawn,
- 'Mongst roses red or on some grassy lawn,
- But wakened often, from strange dreams of bliss,
- To find their mouths all melting in a kiss.
- Their hearts were filled with vague, unknown desire,
- Nor knew they how to quench the wondrous fire.
- A wild unrest upon them settled down
- And Adam's brow would often wear a frown,
- And then again, he'd stroke her glorious hair
- And gaze into her eyes and call her fair,
- Then clasp her fiercely, with encircling arm,
- As though to shield her from impending harm,
- Then wildly kiss her--eyes--mouth--neck and breast,
- While she against him, tightly, closely press't.
- Still waited, hungered, starved for something more.
- Yet little knew what nature had in store.
- Just how the fall occurred, so long ago,
- The modern world should naturally know.
- Not touching on his grievous fall from grace,
- But just a hint at what we knoe took place,
- And if his fall was premature, what then!
- That sometimes happens to the best of men.
- Eve's little, truant, tapering fingers slim,
- Beloved of Adam and caressed by him,
- By accident, one night, grew wondrous wise,
- And found just where the trees of knowledge rise.
- Amazed, surprised, confounded, if you please,
- But, womanlike, inclined a bit to tease,
- She tried experiments of many a kind,
- To learn by which she most delight could find.
- And Adam, dizzy with her new-found charms,
- Gave way to every pressure of her arms
- And gave her childish innocence full sway,
- Nor cared to check her or to say her: "Nay."
- Then suddenly, with savage, passionate clasp,
- She drew him to her with an eager grasp
- And sank exhausted, yet with cheeks aflame,
- Athrill with feelings which she could not name
- And Adam, swept away, on seas of bliss,
- Poured all his soul in one, long, clinging kiss.
- 'T was pain, 't was pleasure, 't was a joy intense.
- It seemed as though along each quivering sense,
- Swift rivulets of fire had found their way
- And burned their hearts. The knew not night nor day,
- Nor life, nor death, nor aught that mortals know.
- They only knew they loved each other so.
- Nor dreamed they, even yet, of further joy,
- The one swift dream that comes without alloy,
- And blends two loving natures into one,
- Too sweet to last--that ends ere 'tis begun.
- It came to them like lightning from the sky.
- Each thought the very hour of death was nigh,
- Yet longed to live. Delirious pain
- Went sweeping through their inmost souls again
- And black oblivion brooded for an hour,
- O'er passion's birth in Eden's rosy bower.
- And when, at last, Eve wakened from her swoon,
- The night had fled. The glare of Eden's noon
- Sent showers of golden light through wavering trees,
- And subtle fragrance lingered on the breeze.
- Throughout the realm of Eden's joyous bower,
- All things that lived were happy in that hour,
- For, led by sweet desire, example given,
- They found, on earth, the one foretaste of Heaven.
- And since you must know all there is to know,
- When Eve awakened, in a blushing glow,
- Her thirst for knowledge, seeking to know all,
- Discovered first the secret of the fall.
- She sought the source of her new-found delight.
- Turned pale, grew faint and trembled at the sight.
- The Tree of Knowledge stood--ah! yes, it stood.
- Past tense, you see--and while the past was good,
- The present need was great, without a doubt
- And pretty Eve began to fret and pout.
- She wept and sighed and said "I see it all,
- For here was death and there, alas! the fall."
Sunday, January 10, 2010
The Fall of Man
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment