Of stateliest Covert, Cedar, Pine, or Palme,Then voluble and bold, now hid, now seenAmong thick-wov'n Arborets and FloursImborderd on each Bank, the hand of Eve:Spot more delicious then those Gardens feign'd
[440]
Or of reviv'd Adonis or renowndAlcinous, host of old Laertes Son,Or that, not Mystic, where the Sapient KingHeld dalliance with his faire Egyptian Spouse.Much hee the Place admir'd, the Person more.As one who long in populous City pent,Where Houses thick and Sewers annoy the Aire,Forth issuing on a Summers Morn, to breatheAmong the pleasant Villages and FarmesAdjoynd, from each thing met conceaves delight,
[450]
The smell of Grain, or tedded Grass, or Kine,Or Dairie, each rural sight, each rural sound;If chance with Nymphlike step fair Virgin pass,What pleasing seemd, for her now pleases more,She most, and in her look summs all Delight.Such Pleasure took the Serpent to beholdThis Flourie Plat, the sweet recess of EveThus earlie, thus alone; her Heav'nly formeAngelic, but more soft, and Feminine,Her graceful Innocence, her every Aire
[460]
Of gesture or lest action overawdHis Malice, and with rapine sweet bereav'dHis fierceness of the fierce intent it brought:That space the Evil one abstracted stoodFrom his own evil, and for the time remaindStupidly good, of enmitie disarm'd,Of guile, of hate, of envie, of revenge;But the hot Hell that alwayes in him burnes,Though in mid Heav'n, soon ended his delight,And tortures him now more, the more he sees
[470]
Of pleasure not for him ordain'd: then soonFierce hate he recollects, and all his thoughtsOf mischief, gratulating, thus excites.Thoughts, whither have he led me, with what sweetCompulsion thus transported to forgetWhat hither brought us, hate, not love, nor hopeOf Paradise for Hell, hope here to tasteOf pleasure, but all pleasure to destroy,Save what is in destroying, other joyTo me is lost. Then let me not let pass
[480]
Occasion which now smiles, behold aloneThe Woman, opportune to all attempts,Her Husband, for I view far round, not nigh,Whose higher intellectual more I shun,And strength, of courage hautie, and of limbHeroic built, though of terrestrial mould,Foe not informidable, exempt from wound,I not; so much hath Hell debas'd, and paineInfeebl'd me, to what I was in Heav'n.Shee fair, divinely fair, fit Love for Gods,
[490]
Not terrible, though terrour be in LoveAnd beautie, not approacht by stronger hate,Hate stronger, under shew of Love well feign'd,The way which to her ruin now I tend.So spake the Enemie of Mankind, enclos'dIn Serpent, Inmate bad, and toward EveAddress'd his way, not with indented wave,Prone on the ground, as since, but on his reare,Circular base of rising foulds, that tour'dFould above fould a surging Maze, his Head