56 LXXVI
NOX NOCTI INDICAT SCIENTIAM
When I survey the bright Celestial sphere; So rich with jewels hung, that Night Doth like an Ethiop bride appear; | My soul her wings doth spread And heaven-ward flies, The Almighty's mysteries to read In the large volumes of the skies. | For the bright firmament Shoots forth no flame So silent, but is eloquent In speaking the Creator's name. | No unregarded star Contracts its light Into so small a character, Removed far from our human sight, | But if we steadfast look We shall discern In it, as in some holy book, How man may heavenly knowledge learn. | It tells the conqueror, That far-stretch'd power, Which his proud dangers traffic for, Is but the triumph of an hour: | That from the farthest North, Some nation may, Yet undiscover'd, issue forth, And o'er his new-got conquest sway: | Some nation yet shut in With hills of ice May be let out to scourge his sin, Till they shall equal him in vice. | And then they likewise shall Their ruin have; For as yourselves your empires fall, And every kingdom hath a grave. 57 | Thus those celestial fires, Though seeming mute, The fallacy of our desires And all the pride of life confute:-- | For they have watch'd since first The World had birth: And found sin in itself accurst, And nothing permanent on Earth. | |