Great are thy Vertues, doubtless, best of Fruits,Though kept from Man, & worthy to be admir'd,Whose taste, too long forborn, at first assayGave elocution to the mute, and taughtThe Tongue not made for Speech to speak thy praise:
[750]
Thy praise hee also who forbids thy use,Conceales not from us, naming thee the TreeOf Knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil;Forbids us then to taste, but his forbiddingCommends thee more, while it inferrs the goodBy thee communicated, and our want:For good unknown, sure is not had, or hadAnd yet unknown, is as not had at all.In plain then, what forbids he but to know,Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise?
[760]
Such prohibitions binde not. But if DeathBind us with after-bands, what profits thenOur inward freedom? In the day we eateOf this fair Fruit, our doom is, we shall die.How dies the Serpent? hee hath eat'n and lives,And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discernes,Irrational till then. For us aloneWas death invented? or to us deni'dThis intellectual food, for beasts reserv'd?For Beasts it seems: yet that one Beast which first
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Hath tasted, envies not, but brings with joyThe good befall'n him, Author unsuspect,Friendly to man, farr from deceit or guile.What fear I then, rather what know to feareUnder this ignorance of Good and Evil,Of God or Death, of Law or Penaltie?Here grows the Cure of all, this Fruit Divine,Fair to the Eye, inviting to the Taste,Of vertue to make wise: what hinders thenTo reach, and feed at once both Bodie and Mind?
[780]
So saying, her rash hand in evil hourForth reaching to the Fruit, she pluck'd, she eat:Earth felt the wound, and Nature from her seatSighing through all her Works gave signs of woe,That all was lost. Back to the Thicket slunkThe guiltie Serpent, and well might, for EveIntent now wholly on her taste, naught elseRegarded, such delight till then, as seemd,In Fruit she never tasted, whether trueOr fansied so, through expectation high
[790]
Of knowledg, nor was God-head from her thought.Greedily she ingorg'd without restraint,And knew not eating Death: Satiate at length,And hight'nd as with Wine, jocond and boon,Thus to her self she pleasingly began.O Sovran, vertuous, precious of all TreesIn Paradise, of operation blestTo Sapience, hitherto obscur'd, infam'd,And thy fair Fruit let hang, as to no endCreated; but henceforth my early care,
[800]
Not without Song, each Morning, and due praiseShall tend thee, and the fertil burden easeOf thy full branches offer'd free to all;Till dieted by thee I grow matureIn knowledge, as the Gods who all things know;Though others envie what they cannot give;For had the gift bin theirs, it had not hereThus grown. Experience, next to thee I owe,Best guide; not following thee, I had remaind