Now looking downwards, juft as griev'd appears The proper organs, proper pow'rs affign'd; 189 COMMENTARY. For now he putation of certain fuppofed NATURAL EVILS. fhews (from y 172 to 207) that though the complaint of his adverfaries against Providence be on pretence of real moral evils; yet, at bottom, it all proceeds from their impatience under imaginary natural ones, the iffue of a depraved appetite for visionary advantages, which if Man had, they would be either useless or pernicious to him, as unfuitable to his ftate, or repugnant to his condition. Though God (fays he) hath so bountifully bestowed, on Man, Faculties little lefs than angelic, yet he ungratefully grafps at higher; and then, extravagant in another extreme, with a paffion as ridiculous as that is impious, envies even the peculiar accommodations of brutes. But here his own principles fhew his folly. He fuppofes them all made for his ufe: Now what use could he have of them, when he had robbed them of all their qualities? Qualities, diftributed with the highest wisdom, as they are divided at prefent; but which, if beftowed according to the froward humour of thefe childifh complainers, would be found to be, every where, either wanting or fuperfluous. But even with these brutal qualities, Man would not only be no gainer, but a confiderable lofer; as is fhewn, in NOTES. VER. 182. Here with degrees of fwiftnefs, &c.] It is a certain axiom in the anatomy of creatures, that in proportion as they are formed for ftrength, their fwiftnefs is leffened; or as they are formed for swiftness, their strength is abated. P. All in exact proportion to the state; Nothing to add, and nothing to abatę. 185 Be pleas'd with nothing, if not bless'd with all? No pow'rs of body or of foul to fhare, Or quick effluvia darting thro' the brain, ! Die of a rofe in aromatic pain? If nature thunder'd in his op'ning ears, 199 195 200 And stunn'd him with the mufic of the fpheres, COMMENTARY. explaining the confequences that would follow from his having his fenfations in that exquifite degree, in which this or that animal is obferved to poffefs them. NOTES. VER. 202. Stunn'd him with the mufic of the fpheres,] This inftance is poetical and even fublime, but mifplaced. He How would he wish that Heav'n had left him still The whifp'ring Zephyr, and the purling rill? Who finds not Providence all good and wife, 205 Alike in what it gives, and what denies? VII. Far as Creation's ample range extends, The scale of fenfual, mental pow'rs ascends: Mark how it mounts, to Man's imperial race, From the green myriads in the peopled grass: 210 What modes of fight betwixt each wide extreme, The mole's dim curtain, and the lynx's beam: Of smell, the headlong lionefs between, And hound fagacious on the tainted green : COMMENTARY. VER. 207. Far as Creation's ample range extends,] He tells us next (from 206 to 233) that the complying with fsuch extravagant defires would not only be useless and pernicious to Man, but would be breaking into the Order, and deforming the Beauty of God's Creation, in which this animal is fubject to that, and every one to Man; who by his Reason enjoys the fum of all their powers. Of hearing, from the life that fills the flood, 215 NOTES. Lions hunting their prey in the deferts of Africa is this: At their first going out in the night-time they fet up a loud roar, and then liften to the noise made by the beasts in their flight, pursuing them by the ear, and not by the noftril. It is probable the ftory of the jackal's hunting for the lion, was occafioned by obfervation of this defect of fcent in that terrible animal. P. VER. 224. For ever fep'rate, &c.] Near, by the fimilitude of the operations; Separate, by the immenfe difference in the nature of the powers. VER. 226. What thin partitions &c.] Sɔ thin, that the Atheistic philofophers, as Pro- And Middle natures, how they long to join, 230 Is not thy Reason all these pow'rs in one? COMMENTARY. VER. 233 See, thro' this air, &c.] And farther (from ✯ 232 to 267) that this breaking the order of things, which, as a link or chain, connects all beings from the higheft to the lowest, would unavoidably be attended with the deftruction of the Univerfe: For that the feveral parts of it must at least compofe as entire and harmonious a whole, as the parts of a human body, can hardly be doubted: Yet we see what confufion it would make in our frame, if the members were fet upon invading each other's office: What if the foot, &c. $ 259, &c. Who will not acknowledge, therefore, that fo harmonious a NOTES. |